Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Cabinet nod for rail board rejig, merger of 8 services

- Anisha Dutta

STEPS AIMED AT RATIONALIS­ING THE 150-YEAR-OLD STATE TRANSPORT MAMMOTH

NEWDELHI:THE Union Cabinet on Tuesday approved an organisati­onal restructur­ing of the Indian Railways, unifying eight services into one and making the Railway Board leaner in an attempt to overhaul and rightsize the 150-year-old state transport mammoth that operates 22,000 trains every day.

The national transporte­r, which has struggled with colonial-era infrastruc­ture and rising debt in its passenger and freight systems, was due for rationalis­ation, with the government setting up several committees to chart a road map.

On Tuesday, the Union Cabinet cleared the proposal for a single cadre named the Indian Railway Management Service that will replace the current eight Group A services.

The new service will be created in consultati­on with the Department of Personnel and Training (DOPT) and the Union Public Service Commission (UPSC) to facilitate hiring in the next recruitmen­t year.

The government said the Railway Board, which is the apex body of the Indian Railways, and reports to Parliament, will no longer be organised on department­al lines. It will be headed by the chairman, who will be the chief executive officer, with four members (for infrastruc­ture, operations and business developmen­t, rolling stock, and finance) and some independen­t members. At present, it has eight members for rolling stock, traction, traffic, engineerin­g, staff, material management, signal and telecom, and to act as a financial commission­er.

Railway minister Piyush Goyal said the transforma­tional reform will ensure efficient functionin­g. “Unificatio­n of services will end department­alism and promote smooth working of railways, expedite decisionma­king, create a coherent vision for organisati­on and promote rational decision-making,” he said.

The Indian Railways recorded its worst operating ratio in a decade, according to a report of the Comptrolle­r and Auditor General tabled in Parliament on December 3. It also noted that the national transporte­r’s revenue surplus has decreased by more than 66% from ~4,913 crore in 2016-17 to ~1,665.61 crore in 2017-18.

In October, the Indian Railways decided to trim the staff strength of its board from 200 to about 150 by transferri­ng about five director-level officials and above to zonal railways in a long-pending move to enhance efficiency.

The proposed reforms are aimed at ending the division of the mammoth organisati­on into different department­s. The Indian Railways employs nearly 1.3 million people and its trains carry 2.3 million passengers every day.

“We will now have only a fivemember railway board; with a chairperso­n who will act as chief executive officer, along with four members responsibl­e for infrastruc­ture, operations and business developmen­t, rolling stock and finance, respective­ly,” railway minister Goyal said.

The government said the move was aimed at ending a legacy marked by inefficien­cy in work, infighting and delays.

Under the proposed new structure of the Railway Board, the chairman shall be the cadrecontr­olling officer responsibl­e for human resources (HR) with assistance from a director general-level level officer. All the remaining posts under the new structure will be open to all officers, regardless of the service to which they belonged under the current structure.

The railway ministry said the existing Railway Board members will continue in their posts until the end of their tenure.

The eight services that are being merged are: traffic, accounts, personnel, engineerin­g, stores, electrical engineerin­g, signal engineerin­g and mechanical engineerin­g.

The modalities of the unificatio­n of the services will be worked out by the ministry of railways in consultati­on with DOPT, with the approval of an alternativ­e mechanism to be appointed by the Cabinet in order to ensure transparen­cy. The process will be completed within a year, Goyal said.

“We will have an alternate mechanism where a committee of secretarie­s and group of ministers will work to finalise the exact term by which we will ensure that the seniority of all 8,400 management level employees is kept in mind,” Goyal said.

“The good news is we will upgrade 27 general managers working at zonal level and across all production units of the Indian Railways. All of them will be given the apex grade of secretary level,” he added.

“Railways has an ambitious programme to modernise and provide the highest standards of safety, speed and services to the passengers with a proposed investment of ~50 lakh crore over the next 12 years. This requires speed and scale, and a unified, agile organisati­on to work single-mindedly on this task and capable of responding to challenges,” the ministry said.

Former Railway Board chairman Vivek Sahai said, “The biggest problem in railways has been governance due to intense department­alism and time and again, this has been pointed by many committees. That way, this is a very good and a tough decision. There are, however, other problems: presently there are eight services and there needs to be clarity on how seniority will be decided, how present officers will be absorbed into the new system... The other thing is, they have reduced the railway board to four members and that is a very good structure, however, it will be a challenge to see how they will transfer the work on the field...”

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