Gazetted officer’s attestation no longer required
You may no longer need a gazetted officer or a magistrate to attest
documents sought by government departments. Prime Minister Narendra Modi
has asked his bureaucrats to repeal all laws and rules which come in
the way of effective governance.
In a meeting with secretaries on Wednesday, the PM suggested
government departments should adopt the system of self-attestation of
certificates, photographs and marksheets, instead of asking for attested
documents or filing of affidavits. He also told officials all
government application forms should be made short and simple by doing
away with unnecessary fields.
“The prime minister said self attestation should be enough because it
is a hassle for the common man to get it attested from gazetted
officers. Anyway, the original documents are required to be produced at
the final stage,” a senior government official told Business Standard.
Obtaining either an attested copy or affidavit not only costs money
but also leads to wastage of time for government officials as well as
citizens, including students, job applicants and beneficiaries of
various government schemes. Attestation by gazetted officers is required
at many places such as applying for a ‘tatkal’ passport, admission in a
central or state university or a government job.
The Second Administrative Reforms Commission, in its report in 2009,
recommended the adoption of the self-certification provision to simplify
procedures. Taking a cue from this, the Ministry of Personnel, Public
Grievances and Pensions issued a circular last year, and some
departments and state governments such as Gujarat and Goa had adopted
it. But it has not been fully enforced at all levels.
The prime minister, who keeps himself updated with the day's news on
an iPad and clicks selfies with his smartphone, told bureaucrats that
rules and by-laws which hamper the effective use of technology should
also be done away with. He asked them to use technology such as internal
emails and intranet in a big way.
Another official said Modi was critical of the archaic rules and
by-laws which govern the country's law and order departments, and shared
anecdotes on how some of those were done away with in Gujarat.
Sources said flying balloons near border areas was prohibited by law
because during World War II, because they were used to transmit
messages. The provision remained even decades after India’s
independence, till Modi took over as chief minister of Gujarat, the
sources added.
The Prime Minister has directed his officers to identify 10 rules and
regulations which can be scrapped or revisited to make them more
effective in today’s environment. He has directed officers to prepare a
dossier of such rules and by-laws and present them for review.
He also said rules regarding transfer and postings of officers needed
to be changed to ensure there was continuity of service. The Prime
Minister added those who are underperforming could lose their promotion
prospects.
“The PM said ‘I don’t believe in transfers. Even if a guy doesn’t
perform I have to think 15 times what to do with him because I am not
transferring a person, I am transferring a problem’,” said another
official.
SIMPLIFYING THE PROCESS
- Prime Minister Narendra Modi has asked bureaucrats to repeal all laws and rules which come in the way of effective governance. A look at what is planned:
- The PM has suggested government departments to do away with attestation of certificates by gazetted officers; instead, documents should be self-attested. Original documents, in any case, are required to be produced in the final stages of any government work, bureaucrats said
- He has suggested to bureaucrats technology should be adopted in a big way. All rules and by-laws, which hamper the effective use of technology, should be done away with, the PM has suggested
- Modi has directed officers to identify 10 rules that can be scrapped or revisited, to make them more effective in current times. Officers are supposed to prepare a dossier of such rules and present them for review
- He has proposed rules regarding the transfer and postings of officers be changed to ensure continuity of service
Source : http://www.business-standard.com/
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.