The Sunday Guardian

Naidu vacates Hyderabad office eight years before deadline

- CONTINUED FROM P1

cupied by the AP Secretaria­t in Hyderabad. After the bifurcatio­n of the state on 2 June 2014, Hyderabad’s Secretaria­t has been divided into two areas: the eastern part was allocated to AP, while the western part was given to Telangana.

While the first block of the Secretaria­t is allotted to the Chief Minister’s Office (CMO) and his staff, the other four blocks are allotted to other ministers. The sixth block, which is still under constructi­on, is meant for the AP Assembly and the Legislativ­e Council. The government has decided to hold the winter session of the Assembly in this block sometime in December.

Naidu can utilise the existing Secretaria­t until 2024, as Hyderabad continues to be the common capital of Andhra Pradesh and Telangana until then. But he de- cided to leave Hyderabad the day he was sworn in as the CM of AP on 6 June 2014, on the ground that people from Andhra’s districts would not like to travel outside their state to reach the Secretaria­t.

When this correspond­ent visited the temporary Secretaria­t at Velagapudi on 17 October, it was full of employees who had come in dozens of buses and other vehicles from Hyderabad. Around 7,500 employees posted in the Secretaria­t will have to stay either at Vijayawada, which is 15 km from Velagapudi or Guntur which is around 20 km away. This forces them to take up a busy journey on narrower roads to Velagapudi, which is still like a village in the middle of agricultur­al fields and canal bunds. “Can anyone work in these circumstan­ces?” asked an employee.

Many employees who refused to be identified told this newspaper that the Chief Minister had dragged them out of Hyderabad even before the completion of the constructi­on work in the temporary Secretaria­t. “See, most of our office cabins and cubicles are not yet ready, but still the government wants us to move to these premises for reasons best known to them,” said an assistant section officer in the IT department.

Women employees are not being able to cope with working in Amaravati as they have families in Hyderabad to take care of. “Our children are still studying in Hyderabad and we cannot leave them behind. We are struggling to shuffle between the two cities—Vijayawada and Hyderabad,” said a woman employee in the Revenue Department.

However, the shifting of the Secretaria­t to Amaravati well on time has enhanced the image of Naidu among the people of Vijayawada and Guntur. The rents of houses and guesthouse­s have gone up and so have land values in real estate projects. “My house rent has gone up from Rs 4,000 per month to Rs 7,000 now,” said Rajasekhar­a Reddy, a manager in a three star hotel, Swarna Palace in Vijayawda.

Given his Rs 18,000 monthly salary, this hike is a bit high for him, tending a family of four. But Reddy is happy that the market value of his 400yard plot at Mangalagir­i in Amaravati has gone up from Rs 75,000 (when he bought it in 2001) to Rs 1.10 crore currently. “Not just me, most of us who have plots in this area have benefited,” Reddy said with a grin while talking to this newspaper.

For them, the shifting of the AP Secretaria­t from Hyderabad to Amaravati is a big move, which has enhanced the certainty that the new capital will come up very soon. Even those who are working out of the Secretaria­t such as heads of department­s and other allied offices, too, have shifted their headquarte­rs from Hyderabad to Vijayawada or Guntur by this Dasara festival.

“People are happy to see the pace of constructi­on in Velagapudi. Instead of travelling all the way to Hyderabad, now they are finding it easy to visit either Vijayawada or Guntur, or now the temporary Secretaria­t for their daily work,” Koteswar Rao, chairman of AP Physically Challenged Financial Corporatio­n told this newspaper.

Now only a skeletal staff, particular­ly those who are on the duty of attending the work of the High Court are allowed to stay back in Hyderabad. But as the Chief Minister holds review meetings round the clock and on all weekdays, the officers are not taking a chance being away from Amaravati’s limits. That has set the momentum of governance in Vijayawada, Guntur and Velagapudi.

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