Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Govt staff draw `1.5L for taking calls, paying bills

- Jeevan Prakash Sharma jeevan.sharma@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Even as central employees threaten to go on a nationwide strike to protest the Seventh Pay Commission hikes, about 3,000 to 4,000 Group A officers continue to do odd jobs at the grade and pay of midlevel bureaucrat­s.

These employees — belonging to the Central Secretaria­t Stenograph­er Services (CSSS), Railway Board Services, Armed Forces Headquarte­r Services and the Ministry of External Affairs — serve as principal private secretarie­s (PPS), senior PPS and principal staff officers (PSO). Their job profile requires them to attend phone calls, arrange files, pay office bills and even perform personal tasks for the officials they are attached to.

The service has its roots in the administra­tive reforms brought in by the British empire in 1919, and continued

THE SERVICE HAS ITS ROOTS IN THE ADMINISTRA­TIVE REFORMS BROUGHT IN BY THE BRITISH EMPIRE IN 1919, AND CONTINUED TILL THE 1990S

till the 1990s. Though computers replaced typewriter­s around then, they were still recruited through a competitiv­e examinatio­n conducted by the Staff Selection Commission.

These stenos or personal assistants are upgraded to the post of private secretary either through a limited department­al examinatio­n or a department­al promotion. After PS, they are promoted to the posts of PPS, senior PPS and, finally, the PSO.

However, they just continue doing the same job at different pay grades. For instance, a PSO takes home `1.5 lakh per month for doing the same job as a steno — who earns `30,000.

The problem was taken into account by the Sixth Pay Commission in 2006. “There is no justificat­ion for maintainin­g a distinct stenograph­er’s cadre in any government office,” the report said. It also recommende­d that the Central Secretaria­t Services (CSS) and the CSSS cadres be merged, and begin recruiting multi-skilled personnel at the assistant or steno level to “act as designated executive assistants who will discharge the functions of present-day assistants, besides performing all stenograph­ic functions”.

Ten years have passed, but the government is yet to arrive at a decision on the matter. The Seventh Pay Commission has also made no recommenda­tion in this regard. “A PSO of CSSS cadre is equivalent to a director in the CSS cadre in terms of remunerati­on, but the (PSO) does the same job as that of a stenograph­er or a PA. This is because the work profile does not change with the upgradatio­n of posts,” said a PPS on the condition of anonymity.

“While many experience­d government officials in the middle and lower bureaucrac­y are sitting idle, officials in other department­s – such as Income Tax – are facing a severe staff crunch,” a senior PPS said.

Sanjay Kothari, who has just retired as the secretary of DoPT, refused to comment on the issue. “The Seventh Pay Commission’s recommenda­tions for 2006 are yet to be implemente­d because it takes time to lay down rules and procedures,” said KS Datawalia, DoPT spokespers­on.

“The prime minister is always talking about minimum government, maximum governance. The government has also constitute­d a task force for the optimisati­on of human recourse in various ministries, as stated by the finance minister in his budget speech. It is hoped that the DoPT will implement the decision at least now,” says a senior officer.

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