The Asian Age

66% salary hike for Delhi MLAs

Still among the lowest-paid legislator­s in the country, rues AAP govt

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT NEW DELHI, AUG. 3

The Arvind Kejriwal government on Tuesday approved a 66 per cent hike in the salary and allowances of Delhi MLAs as proposed by the Centre, but expressed discontent that they were still among the lowest-paid legislator­s in the country.

The hike that comes after a decade was given the nod at a Cabinet meeting chaired by chief minister Arvind Kejriwal and raises the existing monthly salary and allowances from `54,000 to `90,000, said a Delhi government statement.

The Kejriwal government had requested the ministry of home affairs (MHA) that the salary and allowances of Delhi MLAs should be at par with those from other states, it said.

However, the MHA “restricted the proposal” of the Delhi government and capped the salary to only `30,000, it added.

“The BJP and Congress ruled states are currently paying 1.5 to 2 times higher salaries and allowances. The restrictio­n imposed by the Centre has forced Delhi’s MLAs to be amongst the lowest earning MLAs in the country,” it said.

The Delhi government had proposed a salary of `54,000 for the MLAs at par with other states. However, the MHA did not allow this to happen and restricted it to `30,000, the government said.

“Now the salary plus allowances of the MLAs of Delhi has been restricted by the MHA to `90,000,” it said.

Earlier, the MLAs were paid `54,000 per month including `12,000 salary and the remaining amount as allowances.

The constituen­cy allowance has been increased from `18,000 to `25,000, secretaria­l allowance from `10,000 to `15,000, telephone allowance from `8,000 to `10,000, and conveyance allowance from `6,000 to `10,000.

The salary and allowances of Delhi MLAs were last revised in 2011.

Several BJP, Congress, and regional party ruled states provide much more monthly salaries to their MLAs, even though living costs in Delhi are higher than most parts of India, the government said citing examples of Uttarakhan­d (`1.98 lakh), Himachal Pradesh (`1.9 lakh), Haryana (`1.55 lakh), Bihar (`1.3 lakh), Rajasthan (`1.42 lakh), and Telangana (`2.5 lakh).

Many states provide several other perks to their MLAs like house rent, office rent and staff expenses, allowance for buying office equipment, vehicle, and driver allowance that the Delhi government does not do.

Delhi MLAs are also entitled to a daily allowance of `1,000 (subject to a maximum of 40 days per year) for attending Assembly session or committee meetings, conveyance advance up to `4,00,000 (repayable within office term), free medical facilities, `4,000 per month for electricit­y and water facility, annual travelling facility worth `50,000, and `30,000 per month for hiring two data entry operators.

The government statement did not mention any change in these allowances.

The proposal for an increase in the salary and allowances of Delhi MLAs was pending with the MHA for the last 5 years, the government claimed.

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