Why Citizen
Charters are a must
Vanam Jwala
Narasimha Rao
Telangana
Today (21-10-2019)
For any Civil
Society Intelligentsia Team or to that matter for their vociferous supporters across
the nation it should be of utmost priority to see that Citizen Charters in all
government departments and public sector undertakings are in place as an effective
redress mechanism. In fact, the importance of these was discussed more than two
decades ago itself in the Chief
Ministers’ Conference presided over by the then Prime Minister IK Gujral held
on May 24, 1997 on the threshold of 50 years of Independence.
A plan for drafting them on a priority was also prominently included
in the Nine Point Action Plan of CMs Conference. It was made mandatory for all
government departments-Center and State-formulating Citizens’ Charters and
initiating Effective and Speedy Public Grievance Redress System.
In fact, when a feedback was taken 15 years later in January 2011, 24
state Governments
and Union Territories were in the process of formulation of charters by then. VK
Agnihotri, former Indian Administrative Service Officer of AP cadre and in
later days Rajya Sabha Secretary General was responsible for monitoring the
implementation of Charters as well as redress mechanism at that time as
Secretary to Government of India in the department of Administrative Reforms.
Formulation of Charters
Soon after the CMs meet of 1997, formulation of Citizens' Charters
commenced in the departments and offices, to begin with those which had a large
public interface. The methodology was based on a consultation process,
involving different stakeholders, specifying standards of service and time
limits that the public can reasonably expect. This considerably helped in
improving the quality of administration and providing a responsive interface
between the citizen and the public services from the Government. The process
also placed the citizen at the center of administration instead of making him a
passive recipient of services rendered indifferently with no concern for
quality, timeliness or cost.
The citizen’s charter is a document prepared by the service provider
in a clear and precise manner about the quality and method of delivery of
services to the users (Citizens) of the service. The purpose of the citizen’s
charter is to: Improve the quality of service to the public, give people more
choice, tell people what kind of service to expect from the government departments
and make sure people know what to do if something goes wrong in the process of
service delivery.
The six Principles of citizen’s charters are: Published Standards,
Openness and Information, Choice and Consultation, Courtesy and Helpfulness,
Redress when things go wrong and Value for Money. Provision for independent
scrutiny of actual implementation with the involvement of citizen groups is the
basic character of Charters. Though the charter is not proposed to be made
justifiable it would carry a moral commitment of the government and would
provide a framework under which public services could be evaluated.
Values and MIndset
Implementation of Charters by the respective organizations is a major
task, covering vast distances and manpower. It, therefore, needs a monumental
and sustained effort at training, orientation, publicity and awareness
building, as well as regular and honest evaluation, to transform the Charter
from a significant piece of paper into an instrument for changing
long-entrenched values and mind-set. Creating a platform of interests between
the service provider and its users is the first step, balancing the strengths
and constraints of the former against the reasonable expectations of the later is
the next.
In the then united Andhra Pradesh, for a while, remarkable work was
done in this regard. Formulation of Charters and Grievance Redress Mechanism was
a priority item. Dr MCR HRD Institute, the premier training center for capacity
and capability building of state government employees was the platform and coordinator
to formulate charters to begin with.
Dr MCR HRD Institute was entrusted with the work of conducting
departmental workshops in the Institute for select departments to familiarize
with the Principals and modalities in preparing the Citizens Charter. That was
purely the personal initiative of the then Director General PVRK Prasad, a
senior IAS officer to put the plan in to Action.
The Government considered the draft charters prepared in the Institute
and an informal consultation process started by the concerned minister, secretary
and Head of Department with the stake holders. A follow up workshop was
organized in HRD Institute within a fortnight where in the minister concerned
along with his senior officials interacted formally with representatives of
stake holders.
Keeping in view the deliberations in the follow up workshop, the
department firmed up the draft within the next one week. At this stage the
concerned department issued a public notification through print and electronic
media indicating the contents of the proposed citizen’s charter and inviting
suggestions from the general public on the specific points to be covered in the
charter.
Plans in place
Simultaneously the department (coinciding with the publication for
suggestions from public) informally started implementing the contents of the
charter to get a feedback on any practical problems faced in the
implementation. Keeping in view the suggestions from General Public and the
feedback in the trial run of the charter final draft was prepared, approved and
issued by the Government, within three months of the original notification
calling for suggestions from public.
Citizens Charters were rolled out in several
departments to begin with. Among them the Road Transport Authority, the
Department of Employment and Training, the Hyderabad Metro Water Supply and
Sewerage Board, the TRANSO and 4 DISCOMS, the Department of Registration and
Stamps, the Municipal Administration Department, the Commercial Taxes
Department and the Municipal Corporation of Hyderabad implemented them in total
initially. The Center for Good Governance (CGG) was helping departments in
preparing a road map for implementation of the Charters and was building
awareness among user groups. It’s better if the process is begun again and charters
are in place in all the government departments and public sector undertakings
in the state.
The real issue is the need to bring about a total change in the
attitude of public servants towards redress of public grievance at all levels
and to pinpoint responsibility for action on grievance of the people. This is
dependent internally on measures to improve their levels of motivation and
morale through rewards for good work and punishment for deliberate negligence.
The senior officers should constantly supervise the staff at the cutting-edge
level to improve their performance consistently.
(Jwala Narasimha Rao was associated with
formulation of Charters in Dr MCR HRD Institute. He was also one of the two
members of the sub-group of the Core-Group constituted by Government of India
in March 2002 to evaluate the progress of Charters in various States and Union
Territories as part of the Status of Administrative Reforms in India).
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