Relief Turns to Rage: Gujarat Parents Met with ‘404 Errors’ on New FRC Fee Portal

Massive transparency move by Fee Regulatory Committee stalled by technical glitches as parents try to verify school fees.

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Ahmedabad | Gujarat — A major victory for transparency in Gujarat’s education sector turned into a digital nightmare this weekend. While the Fee Regulatory Committee (FRC) finally moved to end the “hidden fee culture” by uploading the approved fee structures of 5,780 private schools online, the portal crumbled under pressure. Thousands of anxious parents across the state were met with sluggish loading times and the dreaded “404 Page Not Found” error, leaving them in the dark just as clarity was promised.

For years, private schools in Gujarat have been accused of operating behind a veil of secrecy, often ignoring mandates to display FRC-approved fees on notice boards. This new digital initiative was supposed to empower parents to verify costs from their homes. Instead, the crash of frcgujarat.org has sparked a fresh wave of outrage.

The frustration on the ground is palpable. For parents already struggling with the rising costs of education, the technical failure feels like another hurdle in a long-standing battle against school administrators.

“We were told that transparency was finally here, but the website is a ghost town,” said a   parent from Ahmedabad whose child studies in a private CBSE school. “I’ve been refreshing the page for three hours. Every time I click on my school’s name, it shows a 404 error. It feels like a cruel joke—giving us hope and then locking the digital door.”

Another parent, expressed skepticism over whether the schools themselves were behind the lack of accessibility.

“Schools have been hiding these orders for years to charge extra for ‘term fees’ and ‘activities.’ Now that the government finally puts it online, the site doesn’t work. Is this just poor infrastructure, or is there more to it? We need to know what we are legally required to pay before the next semester starts.”

The FRC’s decision follows a stringent Supreme Court verdict making it illegal for schools to charge a single rupee beyond the prescribed fee. Crucially, the new order eliminates separate exemptions for “admission” or “term” fees—loopholes previously used by administrators to inflate bills.

In the Ahmedabad zone alone, fees for 2,310 urban and 394 rural schools have supposedly been uploaded. However, when The Blunt Times attempted to verify these records, the requests were repeatedly turned down by the server.

The Education Department has warned that any school found charging more than the FRC-fixed rate will face strict legal action. But for that to happen, parents must first be able to access the data.

Until the technical glitches are resolved, the “transparency” promised by the State Government remains a broken link.

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