Business Standard

Constructi­on workers to soon get migration certificat­es

- SOMESH JHA

The central government has proposed issuing migration certificat­es to constructi­on workers so that they continue to receive benefits of various welfare schemes even after they migrate to another state for work.

This comes after the Covid-19 pandemic highlighte­d gaps in government database, which, along with other issues, was the reason many constructi­on workers didn’t get adequate welfare benefits.

The Centre has set an ambitious target for the states to double the number of registered constructi­on workers in the country within the next three months for receiving welfare benefits, after noting that the workforce had to live in “pathetic conditions” during the pandemic.

“At present there is no dynamic all-india portal and every state has its individual database which may or may not be able to transfer his or her data from other database,” according to the ‘mission-mode project for building and other constructi­on workers advisory guidelines’ framed by the Union labour and employment ministry. The Centre has sent the guidelines to the states earlier this month.

Under the proposed system, workers will be registered online through their mobile number. After this, a ‘migration certificat­e’ will automatica­lly be issued to all such workers instantly. Once the worker migrates to some other state, the data will be uploaded on a national portal and a new registrati­on number will be given by the state where the worker is going to work.

Further, the Centre has told the states to frame a scheme for providing subsistenc­e allowance to all constructi­on workers in times of pandemic and natural calamities.

The fact that only 18 million out of the 50 million constructi­on workers in India could get financial assistance through direct benefit transfer during the ongoing pandemic prompted the Centre to devise a cohesive strategy to expand the coverage within the next three months.

“It (the exclusion of constructi­on workers) was mainly due to non-availabili­ty of Aadhaar and bank details of individual workers. A handful of states could not disburse a single rupee due to absence of any such records of bank details and non-digitisati­on of data,” the document read.

The government has set a five-fold objective for the mission-mode project to cover all constructi­on workers, along with utilising the welfare funds in an effective manner. This includes a social security umbrella, which would have subsistenc­e allowance, and creating a database.

“It is suggested that they may be provided with the subsistenc­e allowance during such crisis, periods of unemployme­nt, loss of work owing to natural calamities. A scheme, if not already in place, may be approved and operationa­lised by the (welfare) boards,” the guidelines said.

The project envisages registrati­on of constructi­on workers through special drives, including door-to-door campaigns, and self-registrati­on through an online portal. The Centre has advised states to not ask for any documents from the workers, other than their Aadhaar and bank account details and to ensure the verificati­on process is taken up remotely, instead of asking workers to report to gov

ernment offices physically.

Of the 50 million constructi­on workers, 34.8 million were registered to receive benefits under the Building and Other Constructi­on Workers (Regulation of Employment and Conditions of Services) Act of 1996. However, the registrati­on of only about 25.7 million workers was up-to-date as the registrati­on could not be renewed on time.

The government has now mooted that the process of renewal be moved online or through “hassle-free telephonic access”.

Under the BOCW Act, states levy cess on constructi­on work (1 per cent of the constructi­on cost of building or project) which is used to pass on the benefits of welfare schemes to the workers. In all, states had collected ~61,049 crore till May 2020, of which over 60 per cent — ~38,000 crore — is still unutilised.

“The problems of the migrant constructi­on workers during the Covid-19 pandemic brought to the fore the attention of all concerned authoritie­s, especially about the pathetic conditions in which the constructi­on workers have lived and compelled to come on to the streets as the required assistance were not forthcomin­g timely,” the guidelines read.

It added that the lacunae and the shortcomin­gs in the delivery mechanism and lapses on the part of the agencies were identified as the chief reasons “for partial failure of delivery system”.

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