Tuesday, 30 October 2018

The Women's convention of Confederation of Central government  and workers  a grand success at Haridwar  on 29th to 30 the Oct 2018 .     











 Com Debadrata Mohanty GS AIPEU Postmen and MTS Convention at Haridwar 30/10/2018

Friday, 26 October 2018

Notification of LDCE for LGO for Promotion to the Cadre of PA/SA from Postman/Mail Guard and MTS Cadre for the vacancies of the year 2016-17, 2017-18 and 2018 to be held on 9.12.2018. - Odisha Circle






Tuesday, 16 October 2018

  Retired Postmen of Sambalpur Division agitate before the Spos Sambalpur for delay in payment of 01 01 1996 arrears order issued on 23 may 2018.SPOs assure to the retired staff payment will be made before Deepaavali.                   






Tuesday, 9 October 2018

The story behind a road named after a postman     


Roads named after celebrated social and political personalities are common. Every city in the country has an MG road, named after the Mahatma, a Nehru road, a Tagore road and the like. It is the norm and rightly so. But a road named after a postman is quite the exception. Postman Chacko road in Thoppumpady in West Kochi is perhaps the only road in the State to be named after a postman.

But then there was a time, not so much in the distant past, when the postman was like an extended family member. People waited longingly and lovingly for his arrival.

Besides the letter or postcard, the telegram or the money order that he brought, he also gave a round-up of the area. There had been a birth, a death, a famine, a political meeting, rain and the like.

Postman P.M. Chacko was one such person. He became a part and parcel of the lives of the people of his area, knocking on their doors not just with a letter, but with help and guidance too. He became more than just another postman. In 2004, the Corporation of Cochin decided to honour his contributions by naming a road after him.

People’s postman

Who was P.M. Chacko and what made him so distinctive?

Eighty four-year-old K. M. John, a tally clerk at Cochin Port, remembers Chacko lucidly. He talks about the pre-Independence times when the Cochin Rajas’s postal service called anchal service existed simultaneously with the British postal service. Chacko worked for the British post and was called “runner”. “Nobody would see him walk for he used to always run to deliver mail. He would easily run 40 to 50 km in a day, his field of work extending from Chirakal in the South to Karuvelipady in the North, areas in West Kochi. He covered distances up to Edakochi , Mattancherry and Chellanam.”

The practice followed then was to clear mail twice a day, at 10 a.m. and at 3 p.m. In between Chacko would help in social activities. In 1948 when the All India Post and Telegraph Union were being formed, Chacko engaged himself in organising that.

“There were no modern public address facilities. He would speak through a funnel and hold a public meeting,” says John, adding that Chacko was a theatre man and loved drama. “His family was from Cherthala and as a 14-year-old, Chacko had got involved in freedom fighting activities for which he was to be arrested. It was then that his brother Joseph, a postman, brought him to Cochin and enrolled him in the service.”

John recounts another incident. “The Palluruthy post office under British Cochin was moved inside the premises of the fishing harbour in Thoppumpady. Chacko came in contact with a seasoned postman, Syed Mohammed who was active in forming a union. Chacko began assisting Syed. He soon got promoted from a runner to a postman but his activities were mistaken as political and he was assaulted. Though Chacko had patriotic leanings he was driven by a sense of duty. He was in fact torn between duty and the country.”

Others from the area remember him as affable and helpful.

Suresh Rao, proprietor of Vasant Mahal Hotel and Lodge, a centre of political activities of yore, remembers him for his punctuality. “We knew it was 11 o’clock when we heard the mail land on our office table,” says Suresh. “Chacko was a workaholic, a duty-bound man in khaki uniform. He was not very tall, wore very thick reading glasses and had a stern expression.” He was service-oriented, says 85-year-old Abraham Puthussery, a well known social activist from the area. His sense of service was keenly talked about even then.

Love for children

A. M. Jacob, a colleague who worked with Chacko in the sixties, remembers him for delivering every single mail unfailingly to the right address. “He never had ‘no returns’. He knew each and every address.”

Jose Thampi, his son, who runs a Cybercafe in Thoppumpady, smiles about this distinction of his father. “Even today the police seek us out in case of any confusion in address. He has left that impression.”

But something about Chacko that really touched the lives of the people was his love for children and his concern for them, as his very own.

Jose recalls that his father would be very watchful about every child and about them attending school. “He would scold shabbily dressed children, as if they were all his own and he was responsible for their welfare.”

When his father passed away in 1987 at the age of 71, the people of Mundamveli where Chacko worked for a long time opened their doors to his family. “We are welcome in their homes anytime,” says Jose with pride.

“There was an all round sense of loss among the people of the area when Chacko died. It was as if some one of our own had passed away,” says Sudhir Master from Palluruthy, who proposed naming the road on which Chacko lived to be after him. K. J. Maxy the councillor then recalls, “When this proposal came up at the division committee meet everyone felt that Chacko’s contributions to the people here were significant and that he was loved and respected. It would be only right to name a road after a person whose sense of duty and brotherhood can be emulated by coming generations.”

And so as most roads are named after our tall leaders there’s this one named after an ordinary postman who left an impression in the hearts and lives of the people of his area.

Courtesy : https://www.thehindu.com/

Saturday, 6 October 2018


Confederation One Day Strike on 15.11.2018 Postponed
October 6, 2018
Confederation One Day Strike on 15.11.2018 Postponed
CONFEDERATION ONE DAY STRIKE ON 15-11-2018 POSTPONED TO 2019 JANUARY 8th & 9th.

TWO DAYS STRIKE JOINTLY WITH CENTRAL TRADE UNIONS AND ALL INDIA STATE GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES FEDERATION (AISGEF).
NO CHANGE IN THE CHARTER OF DEMANDS
SCRAP NPS WILL BE THE NUMBER ONE DEMAND.
Dear Comrades,
As you are aware, in the National Convention of Workers held at Mavlankar Hall, New Delhi on 28th September 2018, all the Central Trade Unions (except BMS) and all other independent Federations have declared two days nationwide strike on 8th & 9th January 2019 against the anti-people and anti-labour policies of the NDA Government.
In the resolution adopted in the June 10th Hyderabad National Convention of Confederation and also in the National Secretariat meeting held thereafter, we have decided that the 2018 November 15th strike of Confederation will be changed, if the Central Trade Unions declare nationwide strike, so that the dates of both strikes will be synchronized to make it a joint strike.
Accordingly, the National Secretariat of Confederation has decided to postpone the 15th November 2018 strike to 2019 JANUARY 8th & 9th. The strike will be for two days. There is no change in the Confederation charter of demands.
SCRAP NPS AND RESTORE OPS FOR ALL

will be the number one demand. All India State Government Employees Federation has also decided to postpone the strike to 2019 JANUARY 8th & 9th.
M.Krishnan
Secretary General
Confederation
Mob. & WhatsApp:
09447068125
Source: Confederation

Friday, 5 October 2018

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 5, 2018

PAY REGULARISATION CASE OF         SRI SUDHIR KUMAR PATRA POSTMAN, ROURKELA-5 FROM 10.10.1997

D.O.J-30.11.1988
SL NO
MONTH
PAY IN 2750-70-3800-75-4400
PAY IN  3050-75-3950-4500
REMARKS
G.P
1
1.1.1996
3100
3200
2
Nov-96
3170
3275
3
10.10.97
3170
3275
PAY FIXATION(REVISED)
2000
4
Nov-97
3275
3350
5
Nov-98
3350
3425
6
Nov-99
3425
3500
7
Nov-00
3500
3575
8
Nov-01
3575
3650
9
Dec-01
3425
3650
10
Nov-02
3500
3725
11
Nov-03
3575
3800
12
Nov-04
3650
3875
13
Dec-04
3795
4050
TBOP W.E.F 21.12.2004
2400
14
Dec-05
3880
4135
15
1.1.2006
9620
7700+2400=10100
16
Jul-06
9910
10410
17
Jul-07
10210
10730
18
Jul-08
10520
11060
19
1.9.2008
11240
11800
IIND MACP WEF 2.12.2008
2800
20
Jul-09
11580
12160
21
Jul-10
11930
12530
22
Jul-11
12290
12910
23
Jul-12
12660
13300
24
Jul-13
13040
13700
25
Jul-14
13440
14120
26
Jul-15
13850
14550
27
1.1.2016
35900
38100
28
Jul-16
37000
39200
29
Jul-17
38100
40400
30
Jul-18
39200
41600



PAY REGULARISATION CASE OF SRI AJAY KUMAR PATRA,POSTMAN,ROURKELA-5 FROM 10.10.1997
DATE OF JOINING 01.04.1991
SL NO
MONTH
PAY IN 2750-703800-75-4400
PAY IN  3050-75-3950-4500
REMARKS
G.P
1
01.01.1996
2960
3125
2
Feb-96
3030
3200
3
Feb-97
3100
3275
4
10.10.97
3100
3275
PAY FIXATION(REVISED)
2000
5
Feb-98
3200
3350
6
Feb-99
3275
3425
7
Feb-00
3350
3500
8
Feb-01
3425
3575
9
Dec-01
3350
3575
PAY LOWERD DOWN
10
Feb-02
3425
3650
11
Feb-03
3500
3725
12
Feb-04
3575
3800
13
Feb-05
3650
3875
14
01.01.2006
8930
7350+2000=9350
ONE INCTT ADDED DUE TO FEB-INCTT
15
Jul-06
9200
9630
16
01.04.2007
9600
10030
TBOP
2400
17
Jul-07
10170
10620
18
Jul-08
10480
10940
19
Jul-09
10800
11270
20
Jul-10
11130
11610
21
2.4.2011
11530
12010
IIND MACP
2800
22
Jul-11
12220
12720
23
Jul-12
12590
13110
24
Jul-13
12970
13510
25
Jul-14
13360
13920
26
Jul-15
13760
14340
27
1.1.2016
35900
37000
28
Jul-16
37000
38100
29
Jul-17
38100
39200
30
Jul-18
39200
40400