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State tops in use of RTI to get at truth Viju B
Mumbai: In the one year since the Right to Information Act came into effect, public information officers (PIOs) of government organisations in Maharashtra have received around 60,000 RTI applications, says Suresh Joshi, chief information commissioner of the state. Although he does not have the figures, Joshi says that Maharashtra "is way ahead of other states''.
The RTI Act was implemented on Dussera day which fell on October 12 last year. The Central Information Commission in Delhi has got 3,405 complaints and appeals. In this regard, too, the state is way ahead.
"Maharashtra got around 12,000 first appeals and 3,000 second appeals which shows that we are clearly ahead of the CIC too,'' Joshi said.
The RTI Act now has been effectively used by the poor who otherwise face immense hurdles to acquire simple documents like land records, pension dues, Employment Guarantee Scheme, and pending police cases.
PIOs of state government organisations have received over 60,000 applications under the RTI Act in a year Pending queries under RTI Act cause worry Mumbai: The RTI Act has e m p ow - ered the poor and disprivil e g e d eve r y - where, especially in Maharashtra. State chief information commissioner Suresh Joshi recalls a case where a woman from a village in Akola district was trying for long to get the salary certificate of her estranged husband who was a State Transport employee. She went in for an appeal after the local bodies were unwilling to give her the details. "When the case came up for hearing, I directed ST officials to release the document,'' said Joshi.
In a landmark judgment, the State Information Commission deemed that the accounts of district co-operative banks should also be open to public scrutiny. "These banks have over Rs 10,000 crore as rural credit and when the authorities were unwilling to reveal details, the commission passed a judgment in favour of the RTI applicant,'' said Joshi.
But what is cause for real concern is the rising number of pendency cases. Till the end of August this year, there are 3,483 second appeals and complaints pending for disposal. RTI activists also question the slow pace of disposal of cases. "It is shocking that only 277 orders have been passed in the last eight months,'' said activist Shailesh Gandhi.
During an RTI conference last month, activists raised this issue with the state information commissioner and demanded that at least 200 orders be passed each month. "The state commission needs to pull up its socks, so that people get justice,'' Gandhi said. The CIC received 818 appeals and complaints in August this year and disposed of 369 complaints.
The CIC, incidentally, has five information commissioners, while the Maharashtra State Commission has just one commissioner.
Senior information officials meanwhile admit that they have a heavy workload and are grossly understaffed. "We just have 18 employees, while CIC has 65 employees working for the commission. States like Chhattisgarh have 35 employees, though these regions get fewer RTI applications than Maharashtra,'' said a senior official.
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