The Punjab Cabinet today approved the draft Punjab Transparency and Accountability in Delivery of Public Services Bill, 2018, which will repeal the Punjab Right to Service (RTS) Act, 2011, enacted during the previous SAD-BJP regime.
To boost efficiency, transparency and accountability in the delivery of citizen services, the Punjab Cabinet approved the draft bill, while also deciding to set up a sub-committee on governance reforms, said an official spokesman here.
The new legislation will repeal the earlier Punjab Right to Service (RTS) Act, 2011, said the spokesperson, giving details of the decision taken by the Cabinet at a meeting chaired by Chief Minister Amarinder Singh.
It will bring transparency and accountability to ensure electronic delivery of services to the citizens in a time-bound manner, he said.
The key features of the legislation, prepared by the department of governance reforms and public grievances to overcome the shortcomings and weaknesses in the existing Right Service Act 2011, include back-end computerization of all public services within three to five years, online receipt of service requests as a mandatory provision and electronic delivery of services to citizens in a time-bound manner.
Other features encompass inclusion of a healthy system of incentives and disincentives for the public authorities and their staff, intimation or tracking of application status by the applicants through mobiles or internet regarding their service requests, and simplified redressal/appeal mechanism, the spokesman said.
The cabinet also gave ex-post facto approval to the constitution of Punjab Governance Reforms and Ethics Commission (PGREC) to bring transparency, accountability and efficiency in all government departments.
Giving details of the sub-committee on governance reforms, the spokesperson said it has been mandated to take a final decision on the recommendations of PGREC.
The Committee, in its discretion, may also remit any matter to the council of ministers for wider consultation and a final decision.
The sub-committee would be headed by the chief minister, with finance minister, minister in-charge of governance reforms and public grievances department and minister in-charge of the concerned administrative department as its members.
The sub-committee would have chief secretary and chairman PGREC as its member secretary and special invitee respectively.
The recommendations of the commission shall be sent to the Department of Governance Reforms (DoGR).
The DoGR shall further send the recommendations to the concerned administrative department to obtain its views and, if so required, the administrative department concerned shall draw a Cabinet memorandum for the implementation of the recommendations, the spokesperson said.
This entire exercise shall be completed within six weeks.
The department of governance reforms and public grievances shall put up the status of the implementation of the decisions to the cabinet sub-committee on quarterly basis through chief secretary-cum-member secretary, the spokesperson said.
(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
RECOMMENDED FOR YOU