Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

New pay scale benefits for ordnance staff too: HC

UNIFORMITY Citing ‘equal pay for equal work’ principle, Delhi High Court tells Centre to grant pay parity to ordnance factory employees

- Soibam Rocky Singh rocky.singh@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Employees at Ordnance Factories (OF) – who have been contesting their omission from the benefits of the sixth pay commission for over seven years have finally more than one reason to rejoice.

Reining in the principle of ‘equal pay for equal work’ at public offices, the Delhi High Court has directed the Centre to grant pay parity to employees in the OF with that of identicall­y ranked official in the Central Secretaria­t Service (CSS) and Central Secretaria­t Stenograph­er’s Service (CSSS).

The direction will be applied retrospect­ively from 2006 — when the sixth CPC was implemente­d. Not only this, the HC order will come in handy for the employees of the OF when the seventh central pay commission is implemente­d.

The HC order came in response to a petition filed by Ordnance Factory Employees Associatio­n challengin­g the decision of the finance ministry declining their request for the assistants working in the OF Board to be given same pay scale as was given to similarly placed officials i n CSS, CSSS, Ar my Headquarte­rs, UPSC and other services.

The starting point of discrimi- nation against the employees of the OF Board came soon before the acceptance of recommenda­tion of the sixth CPC when a pay upgradatio­n of employees of CSS and CSSS was made in September 2006.

While the OFs and Armed Forces Head Quarters (AFHQs) — both non-secretaria­t organizati­on — were excluded from the pay upgradatio­n, the latter took the matter to the Central Administra­tive Tribunal (CAT) and got an order in its favour.

In the case of OF Board, the central government took the view that since it was a non-attached office working outside the Secretaria­t, there cannot be parity of pay scales. The OF Board was denied benefit of upgradatio­n and the replacemen­t scales given by the sixth CPC. The CAT, too, took a similar stand and denied any relief to the OF Board.

The matter finally reached the Delhi HC last year and after over a year of deliberati­on a bench of Justice S Ravindra Bhat and Justice Vipin Sanghi termed the discrimina­tion meted out to the OF Board as “over-classifica­tion.”

The HC said the discrimina­tion was illogical and artificial. It also took note that the cadre structure of CSS and CSSS is identical to that of the OF. In all the above organisati­ons, the cadre of upper divisional clerks (UDCs) is filled by the feeder of the cadre of the lower divisional clerks (LDCs). The cadre of assistants on the OF Board is filled by promotion from the feeder cadre of UDCs with at least five years of experience on regular basis.

“The OF Board was treated historical­ly as equals to CSS/CSSS employees and enjoyed equal pay and all benefits flowing from equal pay,” the high court noted adding, “This was based on the previous four instances of determinat­ions by successive pay commission­s that they performed equal work.”

 ?? Illustrati­on: ABHIMANYU ??
Illustrati­on: ABHIMANYU

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India