Business Standard

Merging ops; no lay-off at Lucknow centre: TCS

In presentati­on to CM, company brass say employees would be given option to relocate once the Noida facility gets ready in one to two years

- VIRENDRA SINGH RAWAT

Against the backdrop of uncertaint­y over continuati­on of its Lucknow developmen­t centre, Tata Consultanc­y Services (TCS) has told the Uttar Pradesh government that it is not retrenchin­g any staffers but is consolidat­ing the operations to a bigger centre in Noida.

A TCS team led by Rajesh Gopinathan, managing director, called on Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath here on Friday evening. This was after the Lucknow employees had appealed to the CM to intervene and get the company to keep the local unit alive.

The delegation gave a presentati­on to the CM and top officials and explained that, in line with a business plan, the company was consolidat­ing its operations and discontinu­ing with smaller units for economy of scale. The government’s additional chief secretary for planning and informatio­n technology and electronic­s, Sanjiv Saran, was present in the meeting.

Gopinath said the company was expanding its existing Noida operations, currently supporting 15,000 people, to accommodat­e between 25,000 and 40,000 staffers in the near future.

“The TCS officials said until the Noida capacity was enhanced, the Lucknow centre would continue to operate. Once the Noida integrated facility gets ready in another one to two years, the staff would be given the option to relocate,” said Saran.

TCS has been functionin­g in the state capital for 33 years. It was among the first IT majors to set foot in UP.

Last month, it had denied suggestion­s of prospectiv­e job losses in view of the company closing down its Lucknow centre, underlinin­g it was only consolidat­ing into larger centres, including in Chennai. The company said it would continue to hire in UP.

The TCS delegation also comprised its operations head, N Ganapathy Subramania­m, vice-president Alok Kumar and senior general manager S K Nair. They parried queries from journalist­s who’d gathered at the secretaria­t to report on the matter.

Currently, TCS operates out of a rented premises here in the upmarket Gomti Nagar area, where tenancy rates are high. The building owners have assured the state government that they are willing to renegotiat­e rentals, as they do not want to be blamed for the proposed shifting from Lucknow, a senior government official told Business Standard.

The state government has also offered TCS around 40 acres near the city airport to set up a developmen­t centre. The company is non-committal.

The Lucknow unit employs nearly 1,700 engineers and 300 support staff. The employees had taken out a candle march and also used social media to garner support. Most of the staffers say they have family problems in relocating. And, fear job loss, given the tough times the domestic IT sector has been facing over the changing nature of the sector, with the spread of automation, artificial intelligen­ce, cloud, etc.

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? A TCS team led by Rajesh Gopinathan ( pictured), managing director, called on Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath on Friday
PHOTO: REUTERS A TCS team led by Rajesh Gopinathan ( pictured), managing director, called on Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath on Friday

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