Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Centre sets ball rolling for quota in promotions

- Deeksha Bhardwaj letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: The Centre is set to start the process of collecting data on the representa­tion of Scheduled Caste (SC) and Scheduled Tribe (ST) employees at all levels of government, according to an official order, marking the crucial first step in implementi­ng reservatio­n in promotion for these groups that have emerged as key electoral forces in recent years.

Collection of quantifiab­le data on the inadequacy of representa­tion of social groups is a prerequisi­te condition for providing quotas in promotion, according to a raft of judgments by the Supreme Court over the last two decades. The latest of these verdicts came on January 28, and the apex court has since refused to review its stand on the importance of data before implementi­ng quotas.

An order by the central department of personnel and training (DoPT) dated April 12, seen by HT, asked all ministries

and department­s to adhere to the Supreme Court’s guidelines – the first time in six years that it has initiated the process of giving reservatio­n in promotion to SCs and STs.

The move appears to be aimed at ameliorati­ng the two communitie­s that are angry at the years-long delay in clearing promotions for officers belonging to these groups. SCs and STs

have 15% and 7.5% reservatio­n in government jobs, respective­ly, and together form more than a quarter of the country’s population. In recent years, they have emerged as a key political lever with the potential to make or break elections, with many political parties vying for their support.

The government’s April 12

memorandum referred to the January verdict and said three conditions were laid down by the apex court – the collection of quantifiab­le data regarding the inadequacy of representa­tion of SCs and STs, the applicatio­n of this data to each cadre separately, and the cadre being the unit of operation of the promotion roster.

“All ministries are required to ensure that the above conditions are complied with before implementi­ng the policy of reservatio­n in promotions and carrying any promotions based thereon,” the memorandum added.

The document also asked the ministries to appoint a liaison officer to ensure reservatio­n rosters were strictly maintained. The order also says that any promotion orders issued will be subject to further orders by the Supreme Court in a pending batch of cases on the subject.

Reservatio­n in promotion for SC and STs is a fraught issue that has been stalled for years due to a lack of quantifiab­le data on SC/ST employees, leading to repeated protests and simmering resentment among the numericall­y significan­t communitie­s that view government jobs as a key avenue for social and economic mobility.

According to the CSS Forum, a representa­tive body for these officials, promotions for SC and ST employees in the central secretaria­t have been stalled for at least last six years. Data maintained by the forum says that across 70-odd ministries, 12,000 officials have been affected by the logjam. In February, around a thousand officials from the central secretaria­t demonstrat­ed in front of the minister Jitendra Singh, demanding reservatio­n in promotion, which only applies up to a certain level. According to CSS general secretary Manmohan Verma, the reservatio­n in promotion system applies for section officers and below. “Once the official becomes an undersecre­tary, the system ceases to apply,” he said. CSS is responsibl­e for appoint assistant section officers and section officers. “This will also apply other grade services which induct lower division clerks through central secretaria­t clerical service. The order marks a step in initiating the process, but we will have to see how long it will take to implement it.” “The CSS forum believes that this memorandum brought out by the personnel department related to the promotion in the reservatio­n can soon resume the regular promotion which has been stalled for the last several years in the secretaria­t,” said a statement by the group. The DoPT memorandum said the DPC (Department­al Promotion Committee), has to “carefully assess” the suitabilit­y of officers considered for promotion and added that the appointing authority will only issue appointmen­t or promotion orders after conditions are met. The ministries were told to urgently bring these to the notice of all subordinat­e offices, public sector undertakin­gs and statutory bodies.

Several state government­s and the Centre have repeatedly asked the apex court to relax its stipulatio­n on data, arguing that it was impossible to collect at short notice and was leading to administra­tive problems, but the top court has not budged. Experts also point out that since the government has never had cadre-level data on the representa­tion of SC/ST employees at all levels, collection of such informatio­n may take a long time.

The logjam in reservatio­n in promotion dates back to 2006, when a Constituti­on bench ruling in the M Nagaraj case laid down three conditions: collect quantifiab­le data showing the backwardne­ss of the group, its inadequacy of representa­tion in a particular level of public employment and ensuring administra­tive efficiency. After the judgment, some high courts struck down reservatio­n in promotion policies by state government­s.

In 2018,another Constituti­on bench of the Supreme Court endorsed the stipulatio­n of quantifiab­le data in the Jarnail Singh case. The court said that government­s need not collect data on the backwardne­ss of these groups but upheld the two other criteria, while mandating the exclusion of the “creamy layer” before providing reservatio­n. But the Centre and some state government­s said that these conditions created administra­tive difficulti­es and stalled the promotions of thousands of employees, and requested the apex court to review its judgment. The Union government pressed for reservatio­n in promotion proportion­ate to the population of SCs and STs as per a 1995 judgment by the top court in the RK Sabharwal case.

Attorney general KK Venugopal argued that it should be left to the Centre and states to decide on promotiona­l avenues for SCs and STs. He added there was a roster system in place in every cadre of the government department­s to ascertain the posts required to be filled up by SCs/ STs, and therefore the prerequisi­te of quantifiab­le data should be done away with. The Centre also told the court that any modificati­on in the reservatio­n in promotion policy would throw the country into disarray.

Simultaneo­usly, the court was also hearing a clutch of petitions arising out of judgments from 11 different high courts, which had delivered rulings on various pertinent reservatio­n policies in the last 10 years. Some of the states included Maharashtr­a, Bihar, Delhi, Uttar Pradesh, Tripura, Madhya Pradesh, and Punjab.

On January 28, the top court turned down the Union government’s plea to dilute the requiremen­t of quantifiab­le data, emphasisin­g that adequacy of representa­tion cannot be gauged either on the basis of data on representa­tion of SCs/STs with reference to entire service or in proportion of their population. “Before providing for reservatio­n in promotions to a cadre, the state is obligated to collect quantifiab­le data regarding inadequacy of representa­tion of SCs and STs. Collection of informatio­n regarding inadequacy of representa­tion of SCs and STs cannot be with reference to the entire service or class/group but it should be relatable to the grade/category of posts to which promotion is sought,” held the bench.

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