Hindustan Times (Noida)

J’khand bill giving locals quota in pvt jobs gets panel nod

- Vishal Kant vishal.kant@hindustant­imes.com

RANCHI: A select committee of the Jharkhand assembly has cleared with some changes a key piece of legislatio­n that accords 75% reservatio­n to locals in all existing jobs of up to ₹40,000 per month in the private sector.

The Jharkhand State Employment of Local Candidates Bill, 2021 was originally tabled in the assembly’s budget session in March, when it was referred to the panel for deeper examinatio­n.

The six-member select committee formed by the Speaker was chaired by the state labour minister Satyanand Bhokta. Among the changes made in the original Bill include adding the words “private sector” in the amended bill, changing its name to “The Jharkhand State Employment of Local Candidates in Private Sector Bill, 2021”. The new amendments also increased the salary bracket from ₹30,000 to ₹40,000, and added a new clause that brought public sector undertakin­gs under the purview of this law.

Once notified, the Act will make Jharkhand the third state in the country, after Andhra Pradesh and Haryana, to have passed a law reserving jobs for locals in the private sector.

“This is a landmark law as people, especially those who are displaced for setting up industry, are often forced to protest and hit the streets for jobs would now have a legal backing,” said CPI (ML) legislator Binod Singh, one of the members of the select committee.

RANCHI: A select committee of the Jharkhand assembly has cleared with some changes a key piece of legislatio­n that accords 75% reservatio­n to locals in all existing jobs up to ₹40,000 per month in the private sector.

The Jharkhand State Employment of Local Candidates Bill, 2021 was originally tabled in the assembly’s budget session in March, when it was referred to the panel for deeper examinatio­n. The six-member select committee, formed by the Speaker, was chaired by state labour minister Satyanand Bhokta. Among the changes made in the original Bill include adding the words “private sector” in the amended bill, changing its name to “The Jharkhand State Employment of Local Candidates in Private Sector Bill, 2021”. The new amendments also increased the salary bracket from ₹30,000 to ₹40,000, and added a new clause that brought public sector undertakin­gs under the purview of this law.

Once notified, the Act will make Jharkhand the third state in the country, after Andhra Pradesh and Haryana, to have passed a law reserving jobs for locals in the private sector.

“With submission of the report, the amended bill will now be notified as an Act. The government will form the related rules and regulation­s to implement it. This is a landmark law as people, especially those who are displaced for setting up industry, are often forced to protest and hit the streets for jobs would now have a legal backing. Otherwise now they are often threatened with cases for raising their voice. With increasing privatisat­ion and the Centre pushing for NMP (national monetisati­on pipeline), this law would prove to be boon for the locals,” said CPI (ML) legislator Binod Singh, one of the members of the select committee.

BJP legislator and former health minister Ramchandra Chandrvans­hi, who was also a member of the select committee, said they cleared the Bill because it was in the interest of the state.

While the new law does not fix quota for any vulnerable groups, including displaced or social groups, as done in government jobs as part affirmativ­e action, the amended bill adds a new clause saying that attention will be given for representa­tion.

“During the process of employment of the local candidates, attention will be given to the representa­tion of the displaced due to the establishm­ent of the concerned institutio­n, local candidates of the concerned district and all classes of the society,” said sub-clause (ii) of Section 4 of the new law.

The amended bill also expanded the monitoring committee for implementa­tion and addressing complaints. Now the deputy commission­er in each district will chair the committee with local MLAS, and employment and labour department officers as members of the committees. Earlier, only the deputy commission­er was given the sole right to settle disputes.

“This bill aims at checking the migration of work force from the state. If people get jobs here, no one would want to go out for menial jobs,” principal general secretary of Jharkhand Mukti Morcha Supriyo Bhattachar­ya said. Federation of Jharkhand Chamber of Commerce and Industries chief Praveen Chhabra said: “Majority of the unskilled and semi-skilled labourers in majority of the industrial units here are anyway locals. So it shouldn’t be a problem implementi­ng it.”

 ?? HT ARCHIVE ?? Labourers demand jobs during a stir in Dhanbad, 2018.
HT ARCHIVE Labourers demand jobs during a stir in Dhanbad, 2018.

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