
The 'steel frame' of Gujarat is wearing off at the top. Against the centrally sanctioned strength of 313, the state entered the New Year with just 250 Indian Administrative Service (IAS) officers, a shortfall of 20 per cent. With about a dozen officers set to retire in 2023, the shortage-especially in the top echelons-is likely to become even more acute by the end of this year. Chief secretary Pankaj Kumar's eight-month extension, given mainly to maintain continuity during the state assembly election held in December 2022, ended recently. Additional chief secretary (ACS) Raj Kumar has been appointed in his place, superseding Vipul Mittra, who will retire in July this year. Like Mittra, two other secretary-level bureaucrats-B.B. Swain and S. Aparna-are also set to retire this year.
This dearth of senior officers naturally impacts governance. And it often comes to the fore when they are assigned multiple departments of a key nature. For instance, Kamal Dayani, additional chief secretary (ACS), revenue, also heads the Gujarat State Disaster Management Authority. That the latter body is being meted out a stepmotherly treatment was discussed openly in state secretariat circles at the time of the Morbi bridge collapse last year. Similarly, the new chief secretary, Raj Kumar, had been holding the charge of ACS, home, industries and mines, besides heading the Gujarat Industrial Development Corporation, while the Gujarat Maritime Board and Gujarat Pollution Control Board share the same chairman, R.B. Barad. While revenue and home are among the core departments responsible for the government's smooth functioning, the others are technical ones, and are often red-flagged by various industry bodies for alleged red-tapism, putting a question mark on the BJP government's 'ease of doing business' pitch.
This story is from the February 06, 2023 edition of India Today.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign in
This story is from the February 06, 2023 edition of India Today.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign in

Negotiating The Mind Field
For healing to be wholesome, we need to deal with our mind and emotions as well. Here are the top treatments and therapies offered by some of the most renowned wellness retreats in the country.

VILLA OF WONDER
This home in Hyderabad shows how a simple design can lead to a layered complexity with interiors that are more than the sum of its parts

Mental Health
The mainstream narrative post the pandemic

KEEPING IT NATURAL
AFTER A STUPENDOUS OTT DEBUT IN THE NIGHT MANAGER, ADITYA ROY KAPUR, ON PERFECTING THE BALANCING ACT BETWEEN REEL AND REALITY

Eat, Treat, Retreat...
Close on the heels of medical and spiritual tourism, wellness tourism is the next star on the horizon. Mark Sands, Vice President of Wellness, Six Senses Hotels, Resorts & Spas, discusses this rising trend, and India as a healing destination.

Soul to Sole Healing
The global wellbeing industry, now worth more than ₹362.8 lakh crore is getting more extreme, and more corporate. Welcome to the Davos of wellness-an elite gathering to enjoy weekends of 'trauma dancing' and 'guerrilla energy' workshops.

Make Mine a Large
India is now the biggest market for Scotch whisky in the world. What gives?

Over the Moon
Paper Moon's recent debut on the Goan culinary landscape is more than just another brick in the wall.

THE INDIA MOMENT
From economy to geopolitics to entertainment to sports, the country is making its presence felt in every field

GRAPEVINE BUZZ
Wine may not be the most liquid investment, but it is definitely an asset that can build your collection, and nest egg, if done right. Here's barrelling through some basic pointers.

Contentment - THE ART OF REMOVING AND CREATING HABITS
DAAJI continues his series on refining habits, in the light of Patanjali’s Ashtanga Yoga and current scientific and yogic principles and practices. Last month, he explored the first Niyama of purity, shaucha. This month he shares his insights on that pivotal human quality – contentment, which is known in Yoga as santosh.

An Exclusive Interview With Nandakumar Narasimhan
The Little Red Train

Giving More, Taking Less
FRANCOIS BOUDERLIQUE learnt about the basic principle of Nature – to give more than you take – when he left a high-powered banking job in Paris to live and farm in Kutch, India. He realized that his understanding of eco farming was colored by his past and he needed to open his eyes to a new reality.

Questions On Trainers
The main purpose of learning from a trainer is for them to impart yogic Transmission.

40થી વધુ ચોરી કરનારી ગેંગના ચાર આરોપીઓને ઝડપી લેતી ક્રાઇમબ્રાંચ
ગુજરાત ઉપરાંત દિલ્હી, મહારાષ્ટ્ર અને રાજસ્થાનમાં આ ગેંગ ચોરી કરી ચૂકી હતીઃ પોલીસે 12 લાખનો મુદ્દામાલ કબજે કર્યો

Gujarat House reveals gaps in education sector
THE discussion on the state of education in Gujarat heated up during the assembly elections a few months back, triggering a social media battle between AAP and the BJP. The state administration at the time claimed that the Gujarat education model was the best.

યુવાનોને અન્યાયકર્તા 'ફિક્સ પગાર’ની નીતિ અંગે સુપ્રીમની અરજી પરત ખેંચોઃ કોંગ્રેસ
ગુજરાતના પાંચ લાખ કરતા વધુ યુવાનોને 11 વર્ષથી તેમના હક-અધિકાર સરકાર કેમ અટકાવી રહી છે?

RAHUL DISQUALIFICATION: 16 CONG MLAS IN SUSPENDED TILL END OF GUJARAT BUDGET SESSION
For causing a scene and staging protests in the House over Rahul Gandhi's disqualification as an MP, up to 16 of 17 Congress MLAs in Gujarat were suspended from the Gujarat Assembly on Monday for the rest of the Budget session until March 29.

જનઆક્રોશનું પહેલું પરિણામ કર્ણાટકની ચૂંટણીમાં ભાજપને જોવા મળશે : ભરતસિંહ સોલંકી
વડોદરામાં ગુજરાત કોંગ્રેસના પૂર્વ પ્રદેશ પ્રમુખ ભરતસિંહ સોલંકીએ કર્યા ભાજપ પર પ્રહાર

SC poser on uniform Guj application of remission
TERMING the gang-rape of Bilkis Bano and the murder of her family members during the 2002 Gujarat riots as horrendous, the Supreme Court on Monday sought response from the Centre, the Gujarat government and the 11 convicts whose remission of life imprisonment was challenged by the victim and social activists.