Daily Archives: July 26, 2014

7-year Norm to Determine ‘Local’ Tag

Hyderabad :

Seven years of education immediately preceding the qualifying examination has been taken as the basis for determining the ‘local candidature’ in accordance with Andhra Pradesh Public Employment Order 1975 for the division of government employees between Telangana and the residuary state of Andhra Pradesh in the draft guidelines issued by CR Kamalanathan Committee.

The committee issued the guidelines on Friday for allocation of the state services employees, who are around 51,000, between Telangana and Andhra Pradesh and published the same on the public domain – www.reorganisation.ap.gov.in.

As per the 19 pages of guidelines, Article 371-D of the constitution will continue to remain in force in relation to the states of Telangana and Andhra Pradesh.

All the state-level posts (non-territorial) in departments would be equitably apportioned between the two states in the ratio of population (58.32 for AP and 41.68 for Telangana) or on the basis of geographic intensity of activity in the two states. State governments will determine the departments, state-level posts that are to be divided on the basis of geographic intensity of activities of the departments.

All sanctioned civil services and civil posts that existed immediately prior to the appointed day (June 1, 2014) shall be allotted to both the states. However, sanctioned posts do not include posts approved to be filled-in on contract or by outsourcing.

State services employees (allocable posts) will be given option to indicate their preference to service in either of the two states and allocations will be made after taking their option into consideration. However, it shall be open to the central government to allot the person to any successor state in the administrative interest or in the exigencies of public service. The allocation shall be done in order of seniority as available on June 1, 2014.

Those who have opted, who are ‘local candidates’ relatable to the state to which they have opted, shall, in order of their seniority, be considered for allocation first. If allocable posts in that category remain, others will be considered in reverse order of seniority by allotting the junior most.

Employees who are not local in relation to both states will be allocated on the basis of nativity or domicile based on due verification and certification of nativity or domicile by the head of the department concerned. Employees belonging to SC/ST communities shall be considered for allocation on the basis of their option, if they are local candidates or domicile. In the event an SC or ST employee has not exercised his option they will be allocated to the State of their domicile, as determined on their service register.

Class IV employees and drivers of light vehicles shall be allocated on the basis of option or local candidature, as far as possible. Spouse of All-India Services officers who is a state government employee shall be allocated, where so desired by the spouse, to the state to which AIS officer is allocated. Spouses in state government and related state government institutions shall as far as practicable be allocated to the same state, after considering their options.

Cases of alleviation of extreme personal hardship of state government employees will be exception to the principle. Widowed, legally separated and divorced women employees may be considered for allocation to the state to which option is exercised. Handicapped persons of more than 40 per cent disability may be allocated on the basis of option, subject to the procedure prescribed by the state government. Employees facing serious medical hardships (cancer, by-pass surgery, kidney transplantation of failure) be considered for allotment on special ground on priority on the basis of their option, subject to strict proof of verification.

Employees have to exercise their options in the prescribed proforma published along with the guidelines and submit the same to the Member-Secretary, Advisory Committee, GA State Reorganisation Department, AP Secretariat electronically and through the proper channel indicating their preference for either of the states within two weeks from the date of public notification calling for options.

Scrutiny of statements made in the option forms shall be done and factual accuracy of the statements made therein certified by the head of the department under whom the employee is working. If no option is received within the prescribed time, or where an employee is willing to be allotted to either of the two states such person shall be allotted based on the other criteria. Options once exercised cannot be changed.

After the distribution of posts is finalised, a tentative allocation list for all employees will be drawn up.Any objections by employees should be made within two weeks from the date of the publication of the tentative list.

The ambiguity over their temporary allocation among the employees has been finally put to rest with the issue of draft guidelines by Kamalanathan Committee. We are mostly satisfied by the guidelines though we have certain reservations pertaining to ‘local status’. We will submit our representations, if any, to the committee as advised.

— KV Krishanaiah, AP Gazetted Officers Assocation president

The draft guidelines issued by the CR Kamalnathan Committee lack clarity on several counts. In spite of our representation to the committee through our Chief Minister and Chief Secretary, none of the objections and suggestions were considered. We will decide our future course of action in the meeting with employees on Saturday and submit our objections to the committee as stated within 10 days. — G Deviprasad Rao, TNGO president

371-D in force

Seven years of education immediately preceding the qualifying examination basis for ‘local candidature’ in accordance with Andhra Pradesh Public Employment Order 1975

Committee draft guidelines posted on website www.reorganisation.ap.gov.in

Article 371-D of the Constitution will continue to remain in force in relation to the states of Telangana and Andhra Pradesh

State services employees (allocable posts) will be given option to indicate their preference to service in either of the two states

Employees belonging to SC/ST communities shall be considered for allocation on the basis of their option if they are local candidates or domicile

The allocation shall be done in order of seniority as available on June 1, 2014

Options once exercised cannot be changed under any circumstance

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> States> Telangana / by Express News Service / July 26th, 2014

Chekuri Rama Rao, a Versatile Literary Personality

Hyderabad :

In the death of Chekuri Rama Rao (1934-2014), popularly and affectionately called CheRaa, Telugu literature has lost one of its finest literary critics and a highly respected mentor of poetry in particular and literature in general. He was a versatile literary personality spread across poetry, linguistics, poetry appreciation, literary criticism, teaching, public speaking and editing.

Born in an agricultural family in Illindalapadu near Madhira in Khammam district, he had his education in Sattenapalli, Narsaraopet, Hyderabad and Visakhapatnam. While in high school in Narasaraopet, he began writing romantic poetry under the influence of Nayani Subba Rao, a harbinger of romantic poetry in Telugu. Studying BA in Nizam College in the early 1950s when love for Telugu language and literature were in the air, he got interested in Telugu and went to Andhra University to do his masters in Telugu. Acquaintance with Bhadriraju Krishnamurthy, forerunner Lingusitics discipline in this part of the world, inspired Rama Rao to take up his masters in Linguistics from University of Wisconsin and doctoral study at Cornell University, US. Returning from the US in mid 1960s, he joined Osmania University as a lecturer and worked there in various positions for about 30 years.

The hallmark of Chera was that he was a blend of a rigorous, trained analyst and sensitive, emotional dreamer. These two essential characteristics inform all his writings and speeches as well as his inter-personal relationships. All through he sailed with revolutionary trends in Telugu, so much that he was considered as a member of Revolutionary Writers’ Association without membership in technical sense. He might have attended and spoke at hundreds of meetings of revolutionary literary, students and cultural associations. Yet, that did not prevent him from sharing dais with traditionalists and speaking about and appreciating non-revolutionary trends. He was democratic to the core in all his personal and professional relations though being very strong in his views.

His name stands tall among the Marxist literary critics in Telugu, but his approach was a bit inclusive of taste and rasa, unlike traditional Marxist literary criticism. He published more than a dozen standard texts of literary criticism and linguistics including Telugu Vakyam (1975), Vachana Padyam – Lakshana Charcha (1978), Telugulo Velugulu (1982), CheRaathalu (1991), CheRaa Peethikalu (1994), Mutyala Saraala Muchchatlu (1997), Smriti Kinaankam (2000), Bhaashaanuvartanam (2000), Bhashaantarangam (2001), Sahitya Vyasa Rincholi (2001), Kavitvaanubhavam (2001), Vachana Rachana Tatvaanveshana (2002), Sahitya Kirmeeram (2002) and Bhasha Parivesham (2003).

He also published his poetry of youth after 20 years with the same title – Rendu Padula Paina (1982). Besides these published books and collections, there might be hundreds of uncollected research papers, essays, prefaces and introductions.

He will be remembered more for at least three significant works:

He created a sort of sensational interest among poets and poetry lovers in the mid-1980s with a weekly column of poetry appreciation in the Sunday supplement of Andhra Jyothi. The column, CheRaatalu was a rage in those days with almost all poets aspiring to be written about and all the poetry lovers seeking Rama Rao’s recommendations and analyses.

Any Telugu reader would thank Hyderabad Book Trust for creating and feeding the urge for good reading in Telugu society with its hundreds of titles since late 1970s. The credit for making HBT such an enduring brand goes to Rama Rao for helping HBT as its editor.

Andhra Pradesh Open University was able to attract thousands of neo literates to become graduates not only because of its ease of admission but also of the great style it used in all its text books. Rama Rao was one of the architects of the style.

The legacy Chekuri Rama Rao leaves behind is immense and in a way death cannot take him away from Telugu literary lovers.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> States> Telangana / by N Venugopal / July 26th, 2014