The Asian Age

Assembly tries to go paperless

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT

The Delhi Assembly has asked the government department­s to send their replies to questions asked by legislator­s via email and in a pen drive. The system, which is aimed at promoting paperless transactio­n, will come into effect when the fourday Monsoon Session of the Assembly begins on August 8.

The Delhi Secretaria­t said that they should use the PDF format to file their replies to questions asked by MLAs in the Assembly during the Question Hour.

“All principal secretarie­s, secretarie­s, and head of department­s should send replies via email and in a pen drive. Reply of each question should be given in separate PDF files along with requisite enclosures, if any,” the directive said.

The legislator­s, however, would continue to get hard copies of replies in the House.

“After receiving the soft copies of replies, the Secretaria­t will upload

The Delhi Assembly has asked the govt department­s to send their replies to questions asked by legislator­s via email and in a pen drive. The system is aimed at promoting paperless transactio­ns.

them on the Assembly’s website so that people won’t need to file RTI applicatio­ns for the same,” a government official said.

Earlier, on July 10, chief minister Arvind Kejriwal had said that the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) government would put all relevant informatio­n online to ensure transparen­cy in its functionin­g and that there was no repetition of applicatio­ns.

Mr Kejriwal had launched the government’s e-RTI portal at the Delhi Secretaria­t here and said that the public, which pays tax, has all the rights to know how its money is being spent.

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