The post Staff Shortage Alert! Provincial Governments Face the Heat appeared first on Nepali Sansar.
]]>Six months after the provincial governments were formed, the tragic situation of these organizations facing staff-shortage are surfacing; directly pointing at the government’s inability to provision enough officials.
Provincial government officials say that this has badly affected their day-to-day operating, crippling them from fulfilling any of their services.
Led by the PMO secretaries, three teams headed out to study the situation at the provincial headquarters and the following were the findings:
Earlier in August, the teams led by the secretaries went on a visit to each province’s headquarters to observe the organizational set-up and the related policies and resource allocation and management.
The following were the observations made:
“The availability of technical manpower such as engineers in the three provinces stands at 20-25 percent,” said Kedar Bahadur Adhikari, one of the PMO’s secretary
Out of the 378 positions that were created, only 161 positions have been filled
The provincial officials hold the federal government responsible for not catering to their needs.
The transfer of senior officials by the federal government is also identified as a major problem.
“It was the federal government that withdrew all revenue staffers from the ministry,” said Laxman Prasad Mainali, PMO Secretary after visiting Province 1 and 2.
To address the situation in Province 1, Economic Affairs Minister Indra Angbo said that the federal government has sent six officials to the designated province.
“Though we still lack staff at the ministry, these new officials have given us some respite,” said Angbo.
Furthermore, the Nepal Federal Affairs and General Administration Ministry said that they have made arrangements for 70-80 percent of the officials required at the provincial headquarters.
“Over the last one week, we have mobilized a large number of officials in provinces to address the staff crunch. We have also asked other ministries to do so,” said Rishi Raj Acharya, an under-secretary.
The Federal Government has arranged for 20,900 staff for state administration offices. However, Kathmandu is lagging behind as the potential candidates are hesitant to join provincial or local services.
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]]>The post Nepal Province’s Spending on Modi Visit Draws Attention appeared first on Nepali Sansar.
]]>One such situation took place in Nepal recently drawing special attention.
The Province 2 Government of Nepal made such an alarming revelation as it presented its spending during Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s two-day visit to Nepal, three months ago.
As the local reports say, the provincial government spent around Rs 27.64 million on the occasion of Modi’s visit to Janakpur on May 11, 2018.
According to the Office of Chief Minister and Council of Ministers Spokesperson Padam Pokharel, the Federal Government has already reimbursed the expenditure to the provincial government.
The latest decision to reveal the provincial expenditure is coming up after the opposition raised a criticism over the spending terming that as ‘financial irregularity’.
It is noteworthy that Nepal Government drew similar criticism of high spending for capital expenditure in the recently-ended FY 2017-18, where the government’s spending reached a five-year-high with last month expenditure being a major reason.
Modi began his two-day Nepal visit from Janakpur, where he visited Ram Janaki Temple and also attended a civic reception organized in honor of his visit at Rangabhoomi Maidan.
Modi’s visit in May 2018 marked Nepal-India second bilateral summit in 2018, where the two sides agreed for effective implementation of the bilateral initiatives in agriculture, railway linkages and inland waterways development, among other areas.
Also Read: Nepal’s Capex at 5-yr-high in FY’18, Delays Continue
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