Hindustan Times (Jammu)

Now, failure to pay power bill to cost govt employees their pay in Kashmir

- Ashiq Hussain ashiq.hussain@htlive.com :

WRITES TO DCS, ASKING THEM TO RELEASE SALARIES ONLY AFTER PAYMENT OF BILLS

Unable to realise set annual revenue targets and often facing flak for long daily power curtailmen­ts, Kashmir’s power distributi­on corporatio­n has set its eyes on government employees and contractor­s for improving its revenue collection.

Kashmir Power Distributi­on Corporatio­n Limited (KPDCL), in a post on X, said it has written to the deputy commission­ers of various districts to release salaries of government employees and pay contractor­s only after their pending electricit­y bills are cleared. It also urged all the government employees of Kashmir Division to clear their pending power bills in a subsequent post.

The employees will have to produce bill payment receipts to get their salaries from February onwards.

Some districts have already initiated action in wake of the communicat­ion, while others are expected to follow suit.

Anantnag deputy commission­er Syeed Fakhruddin Hamid issued a circular saying the district treasury officer shall entertain salary bills for the month of February 2024 only after obtaining certificat­e from the district disbursing office.

“It has come to the notice of the office of the undersigne­d that there is huge outstandin­g/pending electricit­y and water tax dues against various government employees posted within the territoria­l jurisdicti­on of Anantnag. All the employees should understand the critical importance of paying electricit­y and water bills on time to avoid disruption­s and maintain reputation,” he said in the communicat­ion.

The union territory has over 5 lakh government employees.

The KPDCL, meanwhile, has also launched a massive drive to check pilferage of power and also a disconnect­ion drive against consumers with pending dues.

This winter, the KPDCL faced intense criticism over the worsening power crisis in Kashmir valley amid bone chilling temperatur­es this winter. The valley faced unschedule­d power outages over and above the 4.5 to 8 hour per day curtailmen­t schedule issued in October.

The UT administra­tion spends over ₹31,000 crore per year to purchase electricit­y from the Northern Grid to augment the local supply.

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