Deccan Chronicle

KCR, Naidu work style irks babus

Officials given department charge too, take front row at CM review meeting

- S.N.C.N. ACHARYULU | DC HYDERABAD, FEB. 14

The TS and AP government­s created new trends in the functionin­g of the Chief Minister’s Office (CMO) which left senior IAS officers irked.

The functionin­g of CMOs in both the states came in for criticism from official circles.

Making CMO secretarie­s as in-charge of some department­s had never happened before, they said. At the Chief Minister’s department­al review meetings, the CMO secretarie­s occupied the front row and department secretarie­s concerned were pushed to the back benches.

Some CMO secretarie­s were also holding meetings with department­s, unheard of in the past.

The Chief Minister generally appoints five to six secretarie­s on various subjects to assist him. Each secretary is allotted some department­s to be looked after.

The department­s would send proposals and files to the Chief Minister through the secretary concerned who would study the matter and brief him.

CMO officials were entrusted with assisting the CM. But both the states convention had undergone a change.

Some secretarie­s were made in-charge of a few department­s. In TS, additional secretary to CM in CMO Smitha Sabarwal was given additional charge of Panchayat Raj and rural developmen­t and principal secretary to Chief Minister in CMO A. Shanti Kumari was given additional charge of medical and health.

In AP, secretary to the CM in CMO Sai Prasad was given IT department earlier. A senior IAS officer said in his 30-year tenure, never had there been such a style of functionin­g. CMO secretarie­s were meant to assist CM in the department­s distribute­d to them. In the past, CMO officials used to sit in back rows during the CM’s review meetings though they had not come to occupy the front row.

Another bureaucrat said that department­al review meetings were becoming those with CMO officials. A senior most IAS officer, who worked in combined AP state and presently is with TS, said, “According to me, retired chief secretary S.V. Prasad has the longest stint of about nine-and-a-halfyears in CMOs of several Chief Ministers. During that period, I attended a number of review meetings where Prasad never opened his mouth. But now CMO officials are speaking more than the department secretarie­s. Some secretarie­s of CMO are holding review meetings also and senior IAS officers are facing problems at the meetings.”

Meanwhile, general administra­tion department officials said due to shortage of IAS officers, CMOs were allotted some department­s.

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