Title: Decentralized Governance
1Decentralized Governance Panchayati Raj
Scenario In Rajasthan Presentation for ZP Members
of Goa 20.1.10 Dr. Anita
Professor Coordinator (PRI-Training)
Indira Gandhi Panchayati Raj
Gramin Vikas Sansthan
(SIRD-Rajasthan), Jaipur
2- Human Resource Profile of
Panchayati Raj Institutions in Rajasthan - Zila Pramukhs (District Chiefs) 33(w.e.f. from
2010 Elections) - Zila Parishad Members - 1013
- Pradhans (Block Chiefs) - 248
- Panchayat Samiti Members - 5273
- Sarpanches (Village Panchayat Chiefs) - 9166
- Ward Panches 1,05,000 (appx.)
- Total No. of Elected Representatives 1,20,500
(appx.) - Total No. of Elected Women Representatives 50
by Reservation 5-10 likely to contest against
general seats
3- 73rd Constitutional Amendment Act, 1993 Salient
Features Mandatory Provisions - Continuity of PRIs Elections every 5 years
- Uniformity 3 tier structure across the
country - Reservations One third for Women at all levels
of PRIs and in proportion to population for SC
ST - Democratic Decentralization Gram Sabha
recognized as the village parliament to plan,
prioritize, implement, audit and review all
development activities - Separate State-Election and Finance Commissions
4- Discretionary Provisions of the Amendment
- Powers and Authority Defined for PRIs
as per Article 243(G) - Preparation of Plans for Economic Development
and Social Justice - Implementation of Schemes for Economic
Development and Social Justice, as may be
entrusted to them by the state government as
per the XI Schedule (29 Subjects)
5- Positive Action Taken
Status of
Decentralization Processes in Rajasthan - 3 Tier PRI Set up in place Electoral
Devolution has happened ! - Time bound 5 yrly. elections held in 1995, 2000
2005 fresh Elections in process Jan-Feb.
2010 - Political Reservations for SC, ST, OBC in
proportion to population and 1/3rd Reservation
for Women, introduced since 1995- making the
excluded- a majority voice! With 2010 elections,
reservation for women has been raised to 50 at
all levels - Now amended Act would enable 50 Reservation for
Women w.e.f. 2010- feminization of Decentralized
Governance bound to lead to greater humanization
of development! - State Election Finance Commns. set up in
tandem with the electoral cycle of PRIs - Rajasthan Panchayati Raj Act, 1994 and Rules,
1996 in force with Schedule- I, II III
respectively- laying down powers functions of
Gram Panchayats, Panchayat Samities and Zila
Parishads- subject to directions, specified by
the State Govt. from time to time - Panchayat Extension over Scheduled Areas Act
(PESA) enforced in Rajasthan w.e.f. June, 1999
but framing of Rules still pending hence a
paper law
6- Positive Action Taken
Status of Decentralization Processes in
Rajasthan - Gram Sabhas being held since 1995 initially on
biannual basis w.e.f. 2001 onwards on quarterly
basis - Ward Sabhas being held since 2000, Chaired by
Ward Panch after the 2000 Amendment of
Rajasthans Panchayati Raj Act making Ward
(average population size-300-500) as the pivot
for development planning review - Right to Information and Social Audit special
integral features of Rajasthan Panchayati Raj Act
Rules - District Planning Committees formed as per 74th
Constnal. Amendment, under the Chairpersonship of
Zila Pramukh, to facilitate the process of
Decentralized Planning, leading to District
Plans, feeding into State Plan (Started from 11th
Plan onwards- 2007) - Six Standing Committees at all levels of PRIs
are elected since 2000, for facilitating
inclusive governance- participatory monitoring
and supervision of devolved subjects - Special Mission and Task Force on Panchayati Raj
set up by Govt. of Rajasthan headed by the Chief
Minister Chief Secretary, respectively
7Perspective Progress of PRI-Cell Systematic
Approach to Training of PRIs 2000 AD Onwards
TNA- 2000, 2004 2009
Decentralized Training Cycle of PRIs Rajasthan
TMD 2000, 2002,2005, 2007(BRGF),
2008(Ref.Trg.SC,ST,?) 2009 (Ref. Trg. for
all) 2010- (Orientation Trg., for all PRIs after
next elections) in Progress
TIA- 2004 under SDC supported PRISMO
TPRIs- 2002, 2003, 2005, 2007(BRGF),
2008 (Ref. Trg. SC,ST,?) 2009 (Ref. Trg. for
all) next Orientation Campaign in 2010
TOT-2000, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2007, 2008,
2009 next in 2010
8- Positive Action Taken
Status of Decentralization Processes in Rajasthan - 16 out of 29 Subject-specific functions devolved
to PRIs, 2000 onwards related to 18
departments however, incomplete devolution,
whereby functions have been transferred, without
transfer of concerned functionaries and funds - Training for All Goal of National Training
Policy achieved for PRI Sector in 2002(for EWRs),
2003 2005- for all PRIs, again in 2007(BRGF
Distts.) 2008-09 Refresher PRI-trainings-
making Rajasthan emerge as a pioneering state in
terms of Capacity Building of PRIs in a cascade
mode of Decentralized Trainings
9Activity Mapping The exercise on the division
of functional responsibilities between the three
tiers of the Panchayati Raj System on the basis
of activity mapping has been completed for the
following 18 departments- I.C.D.S., Social
Welfare, Agriculture, Soil- Conservation,
P.H.E.D., M.D.M- Education- Elementary/
Secondary, Animal Husbandry, Fisheries, Health
and Family Welfare, Irrigation, Forest, Industry,
Food, Tourism, P.W.D., Energy Technical
Education.
10Activities transferred as per the list of 29
Subjects of 11th Schedule to PRIs in
Rajasthan Some of the key transferred
activities and staff are as under- Ø Agricultu
re/Agriculture Extension activities along with
staff, up to the level of Asstt. Director
transferred to Zila Parishad / Panchayat
Samiti. Ø Watershed Soil Conservation
department brought under the control of RD PR
from Agriculture Department. Ø Irrigation Tanks
up to 300 hec. Capacity transferred to Panchayat
Samities along with supporting staff. Ø Fisheries
Tanks of "D" category transferred to Panchayats,
"C" category to Panchayat Samities "B" Category
to Zila Parishads along with supporting staff up
to level of Asstt. Director in Zila
Parishad. Ø Activities relating to Social
Forestry, Farm Forestry Minor Forest Produce
transferred to Panchayat Samities along with
supporting staff up to district level. Ø Zila
Parishad will decide the names of villages- as
per allocation by State Government for rural
electrification.
11- Activities transferred as per the list of
29 Subjects (Contd) - Ø Gram Panchayats have been authorised to take
up the work relating to distribution of
electricity bills, if desired. - Ø Maintenance of Rural Haats transferred to Gram
Panchayats from Agriculture Department. - Ø District Women Development Agency brought
under Zila Parishads. - Ø Dy. Director, DWCD brought under Zila Parishad
and CDPOs under Panchayat Samiti along with
supporting staff activities. - Ø Activities implemented by District Social
Welfare Officer transferred to Zila Parishad
along with Officers up to level of Dy. Director /
Asstt. Director together with supporting staff. - Ø List of beneficiaries selected under Primer
Minister Employment Scheme (PMRY) will be
approved by Zila Parishad. - Ø Proposals of Small Scale Industries will be
discussed in the Standing Committee of Panchayat
Samities. - Report received from Cabinet Committee
constituted to review the functions transferred
earlier alongwith funds and functionaries to PRIs
and to recommend measures to strengthen them as
effective units of Self Governance. Committee's
report sent to Cabinet Secretariat for approval
from Cabinet.
12- Main Deficits
Road Blocks to
Decentralization in Rajasthan - Half baked decentralization moves
responsibilities devolved without any control
over staff and budgets - No untied funds devolved to PRIs and untied
funds to the tune of Rs. 1 crore devolved to DPCs
from 2008-09- by previous govt. now again
likely to be stalled - PESA- enforced in Rajasthan from June, 1999
Rules still not framed a paper law- only
electoral devolution has enabled tribal leaders
to become authorized chairpersons of PRIs in the
TSP-area - Line departments resist transfer of staff
budget control to be devolved to PRIs - MLA MP-LAD quota schemes anti-PRIs-
expenditures incurred are as per discretion of
MLA/MP not responding to Gram Sabha approved
development plans - Quorum in respect of Women, SC, ST, OBC
generally not fulfilled in Ward and Gram Sabhas
even general quorum fulfilled through
facipulation
13- Main Deficits
Road Blocks
to Decentralization in Rajasthan - Government functionaries resist Right to
Information and Social Audit-evolving ways to
delay/deny access to accountable governance - Government-NGO and NGO-PRI linkages distrust
conflict-ridden - Decentralized planning structures in place but
bottom-up need-based planning process and
commensurate fund-flow lacking- esp. as untied
funds - Standing Committees, District Planning
Committee, Ward and Gram Sabhas need to be
energized made vibrant platforms of democratic
governance - Resource constraint in terms of money manpower
ails all levels of PRIs paralyses local self
governance
14- Main Deficits
Road Blocks to
Decentralization in Rajasthan - Lack of Political Will to truly empower PRIs-
both at Central State Govt. levels still
persists - Bureaucratic resistance to institutions of local
self governance - Low level of education specially at Ward Panch
level and Women/SC/ST PRI leaders hampers their
effective functioning - Low level of honoraria and perks for PRI leaders
inter-state variations thereof, violate the
spirit of Equal Remuneration Act, 1976 - Caste and party politics vitiate democratic
functioning of PRIs - Village community by and large alienated from
participating in Ward and Gram Sabhas- on account
of non-fulfillment of Gram Sabha proposals
15Towards Real Empowerment of PRIs Two Pronged
Strategy Required
Structural Processual
Complete Transfer of Functions, Functionaries Funds w.r.t. devolved subjects- without further delay GO-NGO interface to be strengthened for sustained Capacity Building of PRIs w.r.t. transferred functions, functionaries funds
All Devt. Functionaries to be made accountable to PRIs Gram Sabhas report to respective PRI regularly NGOs/CBOs to provide Planning, IEC technical- support for mobilizing active Ward and Gram Sabhas
16Towards Real Empowerment of PRIs
Structural Processual
Transfer of untied funds to DPCs, PRIs, Gram and Ward Sabhas for operationalizing Local Plans- through an earmarking of funds for each level from Schemes, SFC, CFC-funding Top priority to invest in Capacity Building of PRIs, for mobilizing own income/ resources with community support effective financial management of all funds received i.e. from CFC/CSS/SFC own income
Need to augment staffing pattern of PRIs in proportion to no. of functions transferred Capacity Building of Staff ERs of PRIs at all levels needs to be sustained for effective local governance
17Towards Real Empowerment of PRIs
Structural Processual
To ensure better dividends on investment in Capacity Building of ERs of PRIs, the tenure for rotation of reservation needs to be increased by one more term i.e. giving each ER of reserved category- a ten years tenure After elections SC,ST, OBC Women ERs need to be exposed to basic orientation training, within 3 months of being elected, with a view to instil desired Knowledge Skills in first time entrants in governance
For the non-literate ERs, a special functional literacy campaign needs to be organized immediately after elections, with the support of Literacy Continuing Education Department- now being spearheaded by Sakshar Bharat Mission- to be led by PRIs NGOs/CBOs/NYKs /PRIs need to quickly identify the non-literate category of newly ERs help to link them with an intensive functional literacy campaign in their Block/GP itself, with the help of literacy department dovetailing funding support from Sakshar Bharat funds
18Towards Real Empowerment of PRIs
Structural Processual
For providing continuous hand- holding support to PRIs beyond training, need to establish PRCs (Panchayat Resource Centers) at the block level, with desired experts to be hired- funds already available for this purpose under BRGF Interim Panchayat at the block level to identify hire suitable experts-viz. in areas of Engineering, Accounts-keeping, Micro-Finance, Public Health, Gender Social Scientist etc. for guiding Gram Panchayats on a day to day basis, in the PRC
All Panchayats to be computerized equipped with relevant manpower trained in computerized record keeping providing package of services to village community viz.- payment of water electricity bills, giving copy of land records, birth, marriage death certificates, etc. for a user service charge- in Rajasthan- Rajeev Gandhi e-centres being created in every Gram Panchayat Panchayats to be trained in e-governance linked online with all 3 tiers of PRIs, the state department and the Central Ministry for online access to data, related to progress under various schemes, financial progress, physical progress progress on HDI-indicators
19Thankyou