Press Information Bureau
Government of India
Special Service and Features
05-September-2017 09:46 IST
Grievance Redressal
System revolutionized through CPGRAMS
*Amitabh Shukla
For the last several decades several changes have been
brought about to improve transparency in the functioning of the government and
bring accountability. Cumulatively, these have helped the common man find his
groove in a maze of laws and indifference of the lower bureaucracy and the
response time for the solution of his or her grievance has improved
significantly.
However, nothing has revolutionized accountability,
transparency and the response time of the government departments than the
Centralized Public Grievance Redress and Monitoring System (CPGRAMS), brought
in by the Narendra Modi government.
Web based CPGRAMS has been designed and implemented in all
the Ministries and Departments of Government of India. Moreover, a customized
software with local language interface has also been designed for the state
governments too called CPGRAMS - States. This provides online access to all
citizens, including those in Armed Forces personnel, to report their
grievances. The new system allows the Ministry to monitor the grievances and
ensure their time-bound redressal.
A Public Grievances Call Centre has also been set up for
reminding the Ministries and Departments concerned receiving bulk of the
grievances in the Central Government, for expediting action on grievances
pending on CPGRAMS for more than two months. Guidelines have been issued to all
the Ministries and Departments of Central Government to ensure that their
Citizens' Charter, incorporating list of services, service standards and
timelines, are duly uploaded and updated on the respective websites.
As the Modi government has completed three years, I would
limit myself to CPGRAMS which shows how penetration of Information Technology
has overhauled grievance redressal mechanism in the country. While some say
this is “revolutionary”, my personal experience with the system reinforced my
belief that indeed the government departments have started working very fast in
the last over three years.
I have two experiences to share and both relate to the
postal department. In the first instance, my father, who left for his heavenly
abode, left a very old Post Office savings bank account in his files. Several
visits to the post office did not help as the staff found some excuse or the
other to deny payment to the nominee, my mother. Several months passed and
correspondence with the postal department did not yield anything. The Post
Master of the small post office in Bettiah, Bihar, would not clear the papers.
Enquiries were tiresome and time consuming and the staff would demand one paper
or the other consistently.
It was then that I came across the PG
Portal—pgportal.gov.in—and how it is meant exactly for cases like this. I
opened it one fine morning and gave the account details in the complaint
section and wrote a brief description about the problem and the harassment I
went through. It took me all of five-seven minutes to lodge a complaint with my
e-mail ID and Mobile number given.
I logged into the portal again using the number sent to my
mobile phone and e-mail after two hours. It had the details and said that the
complaint is lying with the Public Grievance Officer of the postal department,
with an office at Parliament Street, New Delhi. Next day, in the morning, when
I again opened the portal to see the status of the complaint, it had been sent
to the Public Grievance Officer at Patna GPO. In the next three hours, the
complaint had reached the Superintendent of the West Champaran postal Circle in
whose jurisdiction the account existed. It was actually so fast.
In the evening, I got a call from the Superintendent of
Posts that the matter has been processed and my mother is welcome to visit the
post office next day for collecting the cheque which now totaled Rs 39, 480
after adding interest. I was elated as the system had worked so efficiently.
The cheque was collected by my mother the next day. For the first time, I saw
how this system cut through all sorts of hierarchies, paper work and obstacles
and delivered to the common man.
The second matter also pertained to the postal department.
This time, it was the NSC of my father which had matured at the end of March
2016 and I was the nominee. The agent, through whom my father used to invest in
small savings scheme of the post office, got the paperwork done and deposited
in the Lal Bazar post office from where the NSC was purchased.
But the post master would have none of it. He simply sat on
the papers and did nothing. Lodging a complaint with the PG Portal was a click
away. This time, in three days flat, cheque was given to my representative.
CPGRAMS is the new hope for redressal of any grievance -
related either to the central or the state government. While the grievances
related to departments of central government are handled quite efficiently,
those pertaining to the states are passed on to the respective state
governments. An officer of the Indian Revenue Service said, “The monitoring of
the system is done at the highest level and no laxity on the part of the
officials tolerated”. As monitoring is done at various levels, there is an
unusual hurry on the part of the officials to dispose the complaints as
everyone would now know at which end the problem exists.
That to me is indeed a revelation and my personal experience
with the CPGRAMS has been extremely pleasant.
No comments:
Post a Comment