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Home Opinion Ideas

“Back To Village” : An opportunity to reform people at grass roots

Guest Author by Guest Author
June 22, 2019
in Ideas
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Mudasir Nazir Wani

Since the initiative of ” Back to Village” has been taken by the Government under which the selected gazatted officers for every Panchayat have to spent two days including a night in the allocated Panchayats to listen the grivences of people there, I urge my friends to focus on some points and include them in the list of their grievances: –
1. Majority of the NREGA job card holders are not receiving the minimum 100 days guaranteed work as promised under MGNREG act.
2. Delay in payment of wages ,the NERGA act promises wage payments to job card holders on weekly basis and it should not exceed in any case 15 days,but in some cases it took months even a year for a NREGA job card holder to get his wages.
3. Priority must be given to community based works instead of individual works for the maximum social welfare.
4. Awareness camps must be conducted by the Rural Development Department at Panchayat level regarding the various provisions of MGNREGA as majority of the villagers don’t know the provisions of work on Demand, Unemployment Allowence and fixation of time limit for payment of wages.
5. Rural sanitation is the primary job of Rural Development Department in rural areas,it must not be confined to individual latrines only.. Rural development department must implement the Solid Liquid Waste management provision’s…in towns it’s the job of municipalities and the same job is assigned to rural development department in rural areas..
6. Works under 13th, 14th finance commission or any other works apart from MNREGA must not be allotted on political considerations. Youth must be involved to ensure quality of works and for greater participation in developmental programs.
7. Panchayat Ghars remain locked most of the year except on certain occasions or official visits.Steps must be taken to ensure that will remain functional throughout the year. I suggest establishment of reading rooms or small libraries in every Panchayat Ghar to infuse life in these dead institutions.
8. If a NREGA job card holder moves an application for work to concerned the BDO, is bound to provide him work within 15 day and if the BDO fails to provide work to the job card holder then he is entitled to unemployment allowance, i.e., wages without doing any work.
9. Since the main objective of MGNREGA is to create work opportunities for the unskilled labour class, only the labour intensive techniques are to be allowed and use of machinery is prohibited but only allowed in exceptional cases ..
10.MNREGA job cards are free ,no fee is to be paid to get a job card under MGNREGA. As the MGNREGA promises minimum 100 days guaranteed work in a financial year to every job card holder, mostly it has a ratio of 60:40 that’s 60% labour component and 40% material component. Suppose a village consists of 200 job card holders, means 200X100= 20000 guaranteed working days. Wages per day 180/=; 20000X180= 36,00000/ when we add 40% material component to it, i.e, 14,40000/.Means a village having 200 NREGA job card holders will receive funds to the tune of 50,40000…50 lakh 40 thousand for their development works under NREGA only just in a single year and when we add to it other works 13th FC ,14th FC ,CDF and other works taken under different schemes it crosses 1 crore. Is there any single village in the whole Kashmir valley where works worth more than 50 lakh are taken up every year..almost not because the people in villages remain ignorant and the government agencies usually don’t organize awareness camps to make people aware regarding the various provisions of different acts and scheme’s. Awareness is light and when the light comes, the darkness has to go. So long the masses are being kept ignorant the exploitation will not come to an end.The government must come up with sincere efforts to aware the people about the various social welfare legislations.

(The writer is a freelancer. Views are his own [email protected])

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The publication of “Kashmir Horizon” as an English daily was started with a modest attempt on May 19, 2008.It has been a Himalayan attempt for “The Kashmir Horizon” to survive the challenges posed to journalism in the violence fraught place like Jammu & Kashmir.

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