The end of the transfer-posting raj is in sight. Bureaucrats are set to get
new deal from the new government with the Centre readying a legislation that
will not only assure babus of fixed-tenure postings but also protect them
from political interference in their day-to-day functioning.



Besides, all bureaucratic appointments, transfers and postings will be
subject to parliamentary scrutiny. As a consequence, the IAS and IPS
officers in the country will no longer be at the mercy of the whimsical
transfer and posting regime that operates currently.



However, along with these comforts will come added responsibility. The
government plans to bring in a new public service code that will lay down a
strict performance evaluation regime for promotions and postings of babus.



All these provisions are expected to be part of the Civil Services Bill,
2009, a draft of which is being fine-tuned. It's expected to be an improved
version of the Public Service Bill, 2007 which could not see the light of
the day in the previous Manmohan Singh-led government.



These provisions, officials indicated, will first be applicable for IAS and
IPS officers and may later be extended to all services that come under the
all India service category, including the Indian Forest Service.



The Bill, which incorporated various suggestions of the second
Administrative Reforms Commission, has envisaged setting up of a new Central
Public Service Authority (CPSA) which will not only professionally manage
the civil services but also serve the interests of babus and citizens alike
through checks and balances.



If the Civil Services Bill becomes an Act in its present form, all
bureaucrats will get a minimum fixed tenure of three years. An official said
if any bureaucrat is transferred before three years, he or she will have to
be compensated for the inconvenience and harassment caused due to such a
move.



Regarding top-level appointments in states, the draft states that the chief
secretary and director general of police of the state will be selected out
of a panel of suitable candidates to be drawn up by a committee comprising
the chief minister, leader of opposition and home minister. Currently, the
chief minister alone decides such appointments.



Similarly, the leader of opposition will also have a say in the appointment
of the cabinet secretary at the Centre. The CS will be selected from a panel
by a committee comprising the prime minister, the leader of opposition and
the home minister.



The official said: ``If the government deviates from these norms while
appointing bureaucrats, it will have to inform Parliament about the reasons
for doing so. The new rules also give enough importance to performance
parameters of officers considered for top posts.''



The new Bill will put in place a different kind of performance evaluation
system. Unlike the current practice of annual confidential reports (ACRs)
which take a panoramic view of a civil servant's work, the new performance
management system will evaluate babus on their job-specific achievements and
the number of tasks that they perform as a team leader in a particular
department.



These system will be managed by the CPSA which will work under a chairman
whose rank will be equivalent to that of the chief election commissioner.
The chairman will be appointed for five years by a committee comprising the
PM, a Supreme Court judge, a Union home minister and the leader of
opposition in the Lok Sabha. The cabinet secretary will act as convener of
the committee.



The CPSA will aid and advise the central government in all matters
concerning the orgnization, control, operation and management of public
services and public servants. The authority will also be the custodian of
the public service code for babus.



These codes will be framed to facilitate civil servants ``in discharging
official duties with competence and accountability; care and diligence;
responsibility, honesty, objectivity and impartiality; without
discrimination and in accordance with the law''.



The CPSA, comprising three to five members, will have the power to recommend
action against the public servants who do not adhere to the codes and public
services values.



The central authority will, after the end of each financial year, compile
and submit a report to the government indicating the compliance with the
provisions of the new legislation by every ministry and department of the
government.

*Comments / Opinions / Discussions -*



*Onkar, Mumbai,says:* It is said that something is always better than
nothing. I think all sections of Indian society should welcome this proposal
as it will bring sea change in the way the country is run. The local
administrator of country are civil servants, if there is performance is to
be measured, it is also important to allow them in good environment. The
ideal condition will be to place civil servants directly under the control
of Central Govt rather than Chief Minister controlling their promotions,
transfers, suspension etc. However, it looks very impossible at the moment.
Still as I said above something is better than nothing.



*Indranil, Roy,says:* Finally! Whew! This was loooong due! Extremely
competent bureaucrats have been wasted for ages in this country basis the
whims and fancies of incompetent, corrupt, criminal-minded politicians.
This, I feel, has been the greatest tragedies in independent India. It's
strange that no one ever raised their voice or did anything against this
most heinous crime being perpetrated on this great nation! It's heartening
to know that a right-minded government, which an extremely competent
think-tank, is now doing the right thing. The Mayawatis, Lalus, Jayalalithas
(names just of the top of the mind - there are countless others who had
taken the system for granted), etc of this country need to be now tamed by
the far superior collective wisdom of the extremely talented
"so-far-called-incompetent" babus of this country. For the
bureaucrats/babus: THIS IS THE TIME TO SHOW YOUR METTLE AND COME OUT OF THE
STEREOTYPES OF A BABU, and prove that "bureaucratic" has a lot of positive
connotation to it! Jai Ho!

*SKamath,Mumbai, says:* This will hopefully motivate our babus to do the
'right thing' and not fear the politicians. Also, I think we are moving in
to a more mature phase of governance by involving the opposition and Supreme
Court in administrative issues.



*Sunras, India,says*: who will protect ordinary citizen from corrupt,
uncivilized, discriminatory, and unfriendly Babus?



*kannan,colombo,says*: This will be a "mother of all reforms" and the the
cascading positive effects would be visible soon after the implementation.



*Madeswaran.,Chennai,says*: First move in the right direction. This will
atleast allow good IAS/IPS officers to take right action with less or no
interference. In due course there could be more and more good IAS/IPS
officers resulted.



*krishna kishore, Hyderabad, says:* If this bill is passed, we can see a
real change in all our lives. But this bill may give rise to conflicts
between ruling and opposition parties. This should be taken care.



*nanduri ,australia, says:* All these new rules have no meaning unless the
government selects people on merit basis.As long as the problem of
reservation is prevaling India cannot expect any corruption free
governance.We all know that OBC selected cadre are protected and they amass
wealth as they are beyond the general rules applicalbe for ordinary
citizens.Therefore rules are not be meant to control Mayawati but rules are
to be same for one and all. First of all have guts to select people on merit
and calibre and not caste creed issues.Why should there be a special status
for ISA nad IPS and other central govenrment cadres and reservations.People
with brain are required. We have spent over 60 years with this farce of
uplifiting back ward peole. Give them education,give them fiancial help but
let them compepte with all others and no preferential treatment.Next will be
reservation in ministry,next reservation in teams,but Never found that there
is reservation in defence forces or territorial armies. Why so?



*mindcraft,NYC, says:* Kudos...I guess now the system might make some sense.



*abhie, pune, says:* Excellent news :) This is the beginning of new era.



*B L Gupta, Adalhat, Mirzapur, says:* This may be a good experiment.But the
things shall be controlled by whims and prejudices of the ruling party.In
the majority of PM/CM plus Home Minister (of Centre or the State), The role
of the leader of opposition shall be just a showpiece.Why not to induct
someone impartial, say from Judiciary?



*Diwa,Blr,says:* This is great. Wondering whether our politicians will pass
the bill!



*Venugopal,Sharjah/ Faridabad,says:* Very good development. Since the
opposition leader also involves in it, there is no reason for concern and
hopefully it becomes rule very soon. Also Police Reforms should be
considered on high priority by the Government



*GOSH, Jabalpur,says:* YES FANTASTIC KUDOS TO UPA GOVT. AND PRIMINISTER FOR
SUCH STRINGENT MEASURES NOT ONLY CIVIL SERVICES BUT ALL CENTRAL GOVT
MINISTRIES INCLUDING RAILWAY WHERE LOT OF CORRUPT OFFICERS AND BABUS
OCCUPYING SAME OFFICE SAME STATION,DIVISION ,ZONE LIKE IN BHOPAL RAILWAY
DIVISIONS IN PERSONAL DEPT.SO DEFINITELY CHANGE WILL YEILD BETTER RESULT.



*Abhilash,Pune, says:* Excellent thoughtprocess, I expect a good
implementation for this.



*vishal, Singapore, says:* Great going UPA...a good bill to act upon asap.



Jitu Jain,Pune, says: Good Initiative. But I hope these planning executes
before the term of present government ends.



*Chithra KarunaKaran Ethical Democracy, Chennai says:* Can you see massive
bureaucratic gridlock, with every civil service transfer come under
parliamentary scrutiny? This is asking the fox to police the chicken coop.
What we need is greater transparency provided by the media (fact-based
transparency, not sensationalism) in the performance outcomes of civil
servants. We pay their salaries so they are accountable to We the People. I
additionally support other performance- related strategies such as peer
review and merit pay.



*S C Kalra, Sammamish, USA, says:* It is a step in the right direction but
it must ensure that the officials are awarded for the right
decisions/executions of policies and are also held accountable for non
performance & casual approach to Public Issues



*Tarun Sharma,Bangalore, says:* I thnk Manmohan sir is off to a good start.
Only precaution to be taken is that this bill should be passed as sson as
possible. This will come as a setback for few goverments like Uttar Pradesh
where these bloody politicians think that IAS officers live at their mercy
but they usually forget that these officers are the only one who are running
the state. I herby request all civil servant officers to discharge their
duties honestly as counrty needs u and ur work. Jai Hind.



*Chandan Kumar Som, Kolkata,says:* The bill is to be passed at the earliest
and implementation by all the state governments are to be ensured after
legislation to have transparency in democratic setup.It is better to take
out the officials out of the clutches of political bosses at the respective
state governments.Secondly,the Government also take steps to act on the
recommendation of Police Reforms at the earliest.



*simon fernandes, hyderabad, says:* my sister is a A grade govt officer in
goa.she is a chartered accountant,LLB and MBA..however she is not allowed to
hold finance portfolios but instead has been made to work in the Fire Dept
and the like



*Himanshu** ,USA**, says:*This a welcome change in babudom. Only how welcome
by the babus is a question. There should be some provisions for promotions
only on performance and senoirity or caste should not be a criteria. There
is one more aspect which is very important and often neglected in govt jobs
in India is the performance of the subordinate cadres. The babus with their
weight can get favourable bills passed and there is no improvement for the
cadre which actually works. There should be criterions for babus performance
tied to his subordinates performance. Hope the condition of the subordinate
class improves as babus are already sitting pretty.



*Naveen Garg, Noida,says:* Ab hindi pictures ki theme hi khatam ho jaayegi
:-)



*J,Mumbai, says:* the caption on the cover page is incorrect



*PB, HYD, says:* Brilliant start, hope it see's the light of day and is
implemented in letter and spirit.



*Prem Chowdry, temporarily abroad, says:* Atrocious !! It seems that the
bureaucrats are trying to tighten their stranglehold of the politicians and
make sure that they run the country in the pattern of the British Raj.
Having succeeded in their clever grip over the Armed Forces and the Police
by telling politicians to be aware of a likely coup by them in the pattern
of our neighbours, it is obviously the politicians' turn to be 'put in their
places'. God help our democracy if the measures suggested make any headway,
and not nipped in the bud. Our politicians with all their faults, and
numerous little parties bickering against each other, and,(thank the stars),
the young leadership in the offing, will no doubt, deal with the crafty
knife, honed over years, and aimed to their backs. Beware, my countrymen, a
bureacratic dictatorship will be much more destructive to the nation than a
military one.



*shoaib, Bangalore says:* lets talk of it when it is implemented, we got
thousands of plans still on paper.



*vij, usa, says:* this is a welcome news. Congress-led government has been
taking pro-public, clean government actions.



*Dr. Mohan Swarup Saxena,Singapore,says:* The proposed bill to regulate the
service condions is a good proposal.It will protect the IAS and IPS from the
political motivated actions.But the other terms of the proposed bill are
more significant to protect the public from the wrongdoings and corruption
of Babus which are larger than the politicians.There are several Akhand
Pratap Singhs in Babus whose crimes,if investigated in a fair way will
ashame the tainted politicians also.I may request the Parliamentarians to
put some safeguards for it as the politicians can be set aside after every
five years but the Babus will continue 35 ormore years once they are
inducted in service. Precaution is better than cure.



*vijay,US, says:* I was skeptic about the cabinet, this act not only give me
hope but make be believe that even now there are politicians who think out
country welfare apart from vote bank politics. The plan looks good, lets
await for the implementation

[9 Jun, 2009 0803hrs IST]



*prasad, hydeabad,says:* great initiative.we will have to wait and see its
implementation in the right spirit



*Jayakrishnan**,Singapore**,says:* The advantage of having a scholar like
Manmohan Singh as the PM has started showing off. This is a bill the
government should have passed ages ago. Every government servant should held
accountable for the work he does, and also his performance should be
evaluated strictly. All his pay,perks and promotions should be based on his
performance. This is an excellent move and India will benifit a lot out of
this bill if it gets passed.



*Dr(Prof) Vijay Kumar(Retired),  Jharkhand, says*: Nowadays it has become a
trend that so called head clerks are very often insulted by the current
Netas of india irrespective of states and party connections of NETAS with
various political parties in India.



*K Bhaskaran, Mumbai,says:* The poroposal of reforms appear encouraging but
if the framing the nitty-gritties are left to be handled by babus they will
ensure that these reforms remain on paper and they continue their own way of
functioning. Beware!

[9 Jun, 2009 0741hrs IST]



*Sibu, USA,says:* Bravo India, the government has finally woken up.....kudos
to the new administration.....:)



*TNN / 9 June 2009*

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