Monday 23 November 2015

ACTIONS BY NATIONAL JCM, CONFEDERATION OF C.G.EMPLOYEES & WORKERS & NFPE ON RETROGRADE VIITH CPC RECOMMENDATIONS.

1-MEETING WITH CHAIRMAN VII CPC & CABINET SECRETARY BY COM. SHIVA GOPAL MISHRA SECRETARY NCJCM- PROTEST LODGED AGAINST RETROGRADE SIDES OF VII CPC RECOMMENDATIONS AND FOR HOLDING OF NATIONAL JCM IMMEDIATLY. CABINET SECRETARY ASSURED FOR CALLING OF NATIONAL JCM. THE SECRETARY STAFF SIDE NATIONAL JCM ALSO WROTE  LETTERS TO CABINET SECRETARY ON THE ISSUE OF NON-SETTLEMENT OF VARIOUS DEMANDS OF C.G EMPLOYEES, RAISED BY STAFF SIDE INCLUDING THE DEMAND OF INCLUSION OF GDS IN THE  VIITH CPC & TO REMOVE ALL RETROGRADE RECOMMENDATIONS OF VII TH CPC.

2- JCM STAFF SIDE  (NJCA) CALLED UPON ALL CENTRAL GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES TO OBSERVE BLACK DAY BY HOLDING MASSIVE DEMONSTRATION, WEARING BLACK BADGES ALL OVER THE COUNTRY ON 27TH NOVEMBER 2015 TO PROTEST AGAINST THE RETROGRADE RECOMMENDATIONS OF VII TH CPC.

3- NOTICE HAS BEEN GIVEN BY COM. M.KRISHNAN, SG FOR HOLDING OF NATIONAL SECRETARIAT MEETING OF CONFEDERATION OF CENTRAL GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES &WORKERS IN NFPE OFFICE, NEW-DELHI ON 27-11-2015 AT 3 PM TO FORMULATE FUTURE COURSE OF ACTIONS AGAINST RETROGRADE RECOMMENDATIONS OF VIITH CPC.

4- NFPE FEDERAL SECRETARIAT MEETING HAS BEEN CALLED UPON BY COM. R.N.PARASHAR, SG NFPE TO BE HELD AT NFPE OFFICE ON 26-11-2015 AT 6 PM.

OBSERVE THE BLACK DAY, WEARING BLACK BADGES AND LAUNCH  MASS DEMONSTRATION IN ALL WORK SPOTS ON 27-11-2015 POSITIVELY TO SHOW ANGUISH AGAINST DISAPPOINTING VIITH CPC RECOMMENDATIONS.

OO

Saturday 21 November 2015

7th  PAY COMMISSION REPORT

TOTALLY DISAPPOINTING
POSTAL EMPLOYEES – ALL DEMANDS REGARDING ENHANCED WAGES AND SERVICE CONDITIONS REJECTED


HOLD PROTEST DEMONSTRATIONS ALL OVER THE CIRCLE


1.  Commission is of the view that there is no justification of upgrading the pay of
(a)  Postal Assistants/Sorting Assistants
(b) Postal Assistant (SBCO)
(c)  Postal Assistant (CO)
(d) Postman cadre & Mailguard.
(e)  PO & RMS accountants
(f)   Despatch Rider (MMS)
(g)  Multi-Tasking Staff (MTS) including Foreign Post
(h) Binders
(i)    System Administrators (No separate cadre or pay)
(j)    Marketing Executives (no separate cadre or Pay)
(k)  Artisans
(l)    Technical Supervisors (MMS) (in) Drivers

2.Gramin Dak Sevaks cannot be treated as Civil servants at par with Regular employees. As they are only holder of civil posts and not civilian employees, no recommendations with regard to GDS.

3. Recommended immediate merger of 33 Postal dispensaries in 10 Postal Circles with CGHS

4.ADDITIONAL POST ALLOWANCE FOR POSTMAN
10% of Basic Pay if one shares the another Postmen duty. If it is shared by two Postmen, it will be 5% for both.

5.HOLIDAY MONETARY COMPENSATION
Supervisor, PA, Sorting Postman – Rs. 200/- per holiday.
MTS – Rs. 150/- per holiday

6.ADDITIONAL WORK ALLOWANCE
2% of the Basic Pay per month
10% of the Basic pay if period exceeds 45 days.

7. IP/ASP/SP SCALE UPGRADED
Commission has noted that the VI CPC had placed Inspector (Posts) at par with Inspector of CBDT/CBED. Subsequently the Inspector of CBDT/CBE were elevated to GP 4600. The Commission has further noted that the Inspector of Posts and Inspector of CBDT/CBED are recruited through the same combined graduate level examination. Therefore the commission recommended 4600 GP for IP and 4800 GP and 5400 GP for SPOs.
Highlights of Recommendations of Seventh Central Pay Commission
Recommended Date of implementation: 01.01.2016
Minimum Pay: Based on the Aykroyd formula, the minimum pay in government is recommended to be set at ₹18,000 per month.
Maximum Pay: ₹2,25,000 per month for Apex Scale and ₹2,50,000 per month for Cabinet Secretary and others presently at the same pay level.
Financial Implications:
The total financial impact in the FY 2016-17 is likely to be ₹1,02,100 crore, over the expenditure as per the ‘Business As Usual’ scenario.  Of this, the increase in pay would be ₹39,100 crore, increase in allowances would be ₹ 29,300 crore and increase in pension would be ₹33,700 crore.
Out of the total financial impact of ₹1,02,100 crore, ₹73,650 crore will be borne by the General Budget and₹28,450 crore by the Railway Budget.
In percentage terms the overall increase in pay & allowances and pensions over the ‘Business As Usual’ scenario will be 23.55 percent. Within this, the increase in pay will be 16 percent, increase in allowances will be 63 percent, and increase in pension would be 24 percent.
The total impact of the Commission’s recommendations are expected to entail an increase of 0.65 percentage points in the ratio of expenditure on (Pay+Allowances+ Pension) to GDP compared to 0.77 percent in case of VI CPC.
New Pay Structure: Considering the issues raised regarding the Grade Pay structure and with a view to bring in greater transparency, the present system of pay bands and grade pay has been dispensed with and a new pay matrix has been designed. Grade Pay has been subsumed in the pay matrix. The status of the employee, hitherto determined by grade pay, will now be determined by the level in the pay matrix.
Fitment: A fitment factor of 2.57 is being proposed to be applied uniformly for all employees.
Annual Increment: The rate of annual increment is being retained at 3 percent.
Modified Assured Career Progression (MACP):
Performance benchmarks for MACP have been made more stringent from “Good” to “Very Good”.
The Commission has also proposed that annual increments not be granted in the case of those employees who are not able to meet the benchmark either for MACP or for a regular promotion in the first 20 years of their service.
No other changes in MACP recommended.
Military Service Pay (MSP): The Military Service Pay, which is a compensation for the various aspects of military service, will be admissible to the Defence forces personnel only. As before, Military Service Pay will be payable to all ranks up to and inclusive of Brigadiers and their equivalents. The current MSP per month and the revised rates recommended are as follows:

Present
Proposed
i.
Service Officers
₹6,000
₹15,500
ii.
Nursing Officers
₹4,200
₹10,800
iii.
JCO/ORs
₹2,000
₹  5,200
iv.
Non Combatants (Enrolled) in the Air Force
₹1,000
₹  3,600

Short Service Commissioned Officers: Short Service Commissioned Officers will be allowed to exit the Armed Forces at any point in time between 7 and 10 years of service, with a terminal gratuity equivalent of 10.5 months of reckonable emoluments. They will further be entitled to a fully funded one year Executive Programme or a M.Tech. programme at a premier Institute.
Lateral Entry/Settlement: The Commission is recommending a revised formulation for lateral entry/resettlement of defence forces personnel which keeps in view the specific requirements of organization to which such personnel will be absorbed. For lateral entry into CAPFs an attractive severance package has been recommended.
Headquarters/Field Parity: Parity between field and headquarters staff recommended for similar functionaries e.g Assistants and Stenos.
Cadre Review: Systemic change in the process of Cadre Review for Group A officers recommended.
Allowances: The Commission has recommended abolishing 52 allowances altogether. Another 36 allowances have been abolished as separate identities, but subsumed either in an existing allowance or in newly proposed allowances. Allowances relating to Risk and Hardship will be governed by the proposed Risk and Hardship Matrix.
      Risk and Hardship Allowance: Allowances relating to Risk and Hardship will be governed by the newly proposed nine-cell Risk and Hardship Matrix, with one extra cell at the top, viz., RH-Max to include Siachen Allowance.
The current Siachen Allowance per month and the revised rates recommended are as follows:


Present
Proposed
i.
Service Officers
₹21,000
₹31,500
iii.
JCO/ORs
₹14,000
₹21,000

This would be the ceiling for risk/hardship allowances and there would be no individual RHA with an amount higher than this allowance.
House Rent Allowance: Since the Basic Pay has been revised upwards, the Commission recommends that HRA be paid at the rate of 24 percent, 16 percent and 8 percent of the new Basic Pay for Class X, Y and Z cities respectively. The Commission also recommends that the rate of HRA will be revised to 27 percent, 18 percent and 9 percent respectively when DA crosses 50 percent, and further revised to 30 percent, 20 percent and 10 percent when DA crosses 100 percent.
In the case of PBORs of Defence, CAPFs and Indian Coast Guard compensation for housing is presently limited to the authorised married establishment hence many users are being deprived. The HRA coverage has now been expanded to cover all.
Any allowance not mentioned in the report shall cease to exist.
Emphasis has been placed on simplifying the process of claiming allowances.
Advances:
All non-interest bearing Advances have been abolished.
Regarding interest-bearing Advances, only Personal Computer Advance and House Building Advance (HBA) have been retained. HBA ceiling has been increased to ₹25 lakhs from the present ₹7.5 lakhs.
Central Government Employees Group Insurance Scheme (CGEGIS): The Rates of contribution as also the insurance coverage under the CGEGIS have remained unchanged for long. They have now been enhanced suitably. The following rates of CGEGIS are recommended:

Present
Proposed
Level of Employee
Monthly Deduction
 (₹)
Insurance Amount
 (₹)
Monthly Deduction
 (₹)
Insurance Amount
 (₹)
10 and above
120
1,20,000
5000
50,00,000
6 to 9
60
60,000
2500
25,00,000
1 to 5
30
30,000
1500
15,00,000

Medical Facilities:
Introduction of a Health Insurance Scheme for Central Government employees and pensioners has been recommended.
Meanwhile, for the benefit of pensioners residing outside the CGHS areas, CGHS should empanel those hospitals which are already empanelled under CS (MA)/ECHS for catering to the medical requirement of these pensioners on a cashless basis.
  All postal pensioners should be covered under CGHS. All postal dispensaries should be merged with CGHS.
Pension: The Commission recommends a revised pension formulation for civil employees including CAPF personnel as well as for Defence personnel, who have retired before 01.01.2016. This formulation will bring about parity between past pensioners and current retirees for the same length of service in the pay scale at the time of retirement.
The past pensioners shall first be fixed in the Pay Matrix being recommended by the Commission on the basis of Pay Band and Grade Pay at which they retired, at the minimum of the corresponding level in the pay matrix.
This amount shall be raised to arrive at the notional pay of retirees, by adding number of increments he/she had earned in that level while in service at the rate of 3 percent.
In the case of defence forces personnel this amount will include Military Service Pay as admissible.
Fifty percent of the total amount so arrived at shall be the new pension.
An alternative calculation will be carried out, which will be a multiple of 2.57 times of the current basic pension.
The pensioner will get the higher of the two.
Gratuity: Enhancement in the ceiling of gratuity from the existing ₹10 lakh to ₹20 lakh. The ceiling on gratuity may be raised by 25 percent whenever DA rises by 50 percent.
Disability Pension for Armed Forces: The Commission is recommending reverting to a slab based system for disability element, instead of existing percentile based disability pension regime.
Ex-gratia Lump sum Compensation to Next of Kin: The Commission is recommending the revision of rates of lump sum compensation for next of kin (NOK) in case of death arising in various circumstances relating to performance of duties, to be applied uniformly for the defence forces personnel and civilians including CAPF personnel.
Martyr Status for CAPF Personnel: The Commission is of the view that in case of death in the line of duty, the force personnel of CAPFs should be accorded martyr status, at par with the defence forces personnel.
New Pension System: The Commission received many grievances relating to NPS. It has recommended a number of steps to improve the functioning of NPS. It has also recommended establishment of a strong grievance redressal mechanism.
Regulatory Bodies:  The Commission has recommended a consolidated pay package of ₹4,50,000 and ₹4,00,000 per month for Chairpersons and Members respectively of select Regulatory bodies. In case of retired government servants, their pension will not be deducted from their consolidated pay. The consolidated pay package will be raised by 25 percent as and when Dearness Allowance goes up by 50 percent. For Members of the remaining Regulatory bodies normal replacement pay has been recommended.
Performance Related Pay: The Commission has recommended introduction of the Performance Related Pay (PRP) for all categories of Central Government employees, based on quality Results Framework Documents, reformed Annual Performance Appraisal Reports and some other broad Guidelines. The Commission has also recommended that the PRP should subsume the existing Bonus schemes.
There are few recommendations of the Commission where there was no unanimity of view and these are as follows:
The Edge: An edge is presently accordeded to the Indian Administrative Service (IAS) and the Indian Foreign Service (IFS) at three promotion stages from Senior Time Scale (STS), to the Junior Administrative Grade (JAG) and the NFSG.  is recommended by the Chairman, to be extended to the Indian Police Service (IPS) and Indian Forest Service (IFoS).
Shri Vivek Rae, Member is of the view that financial edge is justified only for the IAS and IFS. Dr. Rathin Roy, Member is of the view that the financial edge accorded to the IAS and IFS should be removed.
Empanelment: The Chairman and Dr. Rathin Roy, Member, recommend that All India Service officers and Central Services Group A officers who have completed 17 years of service should be eligible for empanelment under the Central Staffing Scheme and there should not be “two year edge”, vis-à-vis the IAS. Shri Vivek Rae, Member, has not agreed with this view and has recommended review of the Central Staffing Scheme guidelines.
Non Functional Upgradation for Organised Group ‘A’ Services: The Chairman is of the view that NFU availed by all the organised Group `A’ Services should be allowed to continue and be extended to all officers in the CAPFs, Indian Coast Guard and the Defence forces. NFU should henceforth be based on the respective residency periods in the preceding substantive grade. Shri Vivek Rae, Member and Dr. Rathin Roy, Member, have favoured abolition of NFU at SAG and HAG level.
Superannuation: Chairman and Dr. Rathin Roy, Member, recommend the age of superannuation for all CAPF personnel should be 60 years uniformly. Shri Vivek Rae, Member, has not agreed with this recommendation and has endorsed the stand of the Ministry of Home Affairs.

Friday 20 November 2015

7th Pay Commission: 225-fold increase in minimum pay in last 56 years

The minimum wage is calculated for a family of four—husband, wife and two children. Photo: Pradeep Gaur/Mint
The minimum wage is calculated for a family of four—husband, wife and two children. Photo: Pradeep Gaur/Mint

New Delhi: The minimum pay for Central government employees has risen 225 times since 1959, when the second pay commission submitted its report. While that number may look staggering — and before anyone starts to think government employees are overpaid (because they are not) — that translates into a modest CAGR of just over 10%, which is not very different from the kind of raises most people working for private companies have been receiving for the past few years (which have not particularly been good). In good years, private sector employees get raises between 13% and 15%.
The second pay commission, which was the first such exercise in Independent India, fixed a minimum pay of Rs.80 (Rs.70 basic pay plus Rs.10 dearness allowance or DA) for Central government employees.
On Thursday, the seventh pay commission report recommended a minimum pay of Rs.18,000 per month, making it a 225 times growth from Rs.80.
The first pay commission report came in 1947 before Independence and was implemented retrospectively from 1946. As per the recommendation of the first pay commission, the minimum wage was then Rs.55 (Rs.30 basic pay plus Rs.25 DA).
The third pay commission report submitted in March 1973, three years after it was constituted, pegged the minimum pay at Rs.185 for Central government employees. The government modified it a bit and minimum wage was raised from Rs.185 to Rs.196 per month.
The fourth pay commission recommended a minimum pay of Rs.750 per month for Central government staff. The commission was set up in 1983 and its recommendations came into force from January 1986.
The fifth pay commission increased the minimum pay from Rs.750 to Rs.2,550. The pay commission recommendations came into effect from January 1996.
The sixth pay commission pegged a minimum salary of Rs.6,660, which was revised to Rs.7,000 per month, according to the seventh pay commission. The sixth pay panel recommendations were implemented from January 2006.
The seventh pay panel has recommended increasing the minimum pay by 2.57 times to Rs.18,000 for Central government employees with the belief that along with other facilities and allowances, this will provide a decent living standard to government employees at the lowest rung.
“After considering all relevant factors the Commission is of the view that the minimum pay in government recommended at Rs.18,000 per month, w.e.f. 01.01.2016, is fair and reasonable and one which, along with other allowances and facilities, would ensure a decent standard of living for the lowest ranked employee in the Central Government,” the 7th pay commission report underlined.
How is minimum wage calculated?
The minimum wage is calculated for a family of four—husband, wife and two children. While the husband is assigned one consumption unit, wife gets 0.8 unit and the two children below the age of 14 get 0.6 units each—thus the “minimum wage needs to address 3 consumption units” in total. The formula was devised by the Indian Labour Conference in 1957 and successive pay commissions follow it.
The minimum wage calculation considers expenditure on heads like food, clothing, fuel, education, electricity, expense on behalf of marriage, recreation and festivals; provides a certain amount for housing; and a portion for the skill that an employee possesses. All Central government employees are considered skilled.
For example, the seventh pay commission has assigned Rs.9,218 for food and clothing per month and provides Rs.2,033 per month towards marriage, recreation, festivals etc as part of the Rs.18,000 minimum pay.