Dear Parimala:

Thanks for the honest account of what you are going through. It is
shocking to learn this. However, I am not very surprised. Having heard
you, I would like to see if there are others who can come forward and
testify. 

Subramani

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of parimala
shinde
Sent: Wednesday, June 27, 2007 10:15 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [AI] IT sector employment - stark realities...

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Hay Sudheer!
   
  Thanks a million for bringing such a vital topic on to the list to be
discussed and debated.
   
  In fact, I was more than a 100 times thrilled with the news IT sectors
opening up for the PWD category.
   
  But let me tell you the hard realities of being employed in an IT
company as to what it really feels to be getting the kind of treatment
meted out to myself, and a hearing impaired friend of mine called
Ashvini Kishen.
   
  Things look and sound greener at the top of it. But the hard realities
hear are completely different. I was happy to know that I've cleared my
interview at IBM. I was more than shocked to receive a call from an
agency called Manpower asking me to collect the offer letter.
   
  But wait!!! This was not all!!!
   
  I was told that my contract was for just 6 months.
   
  I had a word with  my computer teacher Ms. Shanti Raghavan on the
terms and conditions of the contract to me where I was told that this is
a tool employed by most of the IT Company's to keep the count low.
   
  I did accept the offer for the higher remuneration that was offered.
   
  I therefore joined IBM on the 30th September 2005, and am still
working on a contract basis.
   
  I've proved myself long time a go, and as many times as I needed to.
  Some thing more disheartening for Ashvini and myself is that wile our
non disabled juniors have bin promoted and have bin regularized, our
positions have bin the same, of course we are given an appraisal each
year.
  I did negotiate on the contract part with my people manager, but it
seems like all my efforts have gone worthless.
   
  I've therefore decided not to break my head against the wall, and to
go for some thing else which is more productive in terms of rewards, and
am willing to put the kind of effort and hard work the job demands out
of me.
  And friends trust me, ones you tend to enter this kind of a cobweb,
there is no easy escape out of it.
   
  My sincere advice to my friends opting for a career out of the IT
sector is to be very careful in negotiating the terms of the offer
before hand.
   
  Thanks and regards
  Parimala


"Sudhir R (NeSTIT)" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:  Dear friends,

We have all been enthused in recent months by the continuous stream of
'heart-warming' news reports from the booming IT and ITES sectors of
India opening their doors to the visually challenged. But, closer
observation of the facts on the ground reveal certain trends that are
disquieting and disillusioning and though not politically correct, I
thought I must bring these to the kind attention of Access Indians.

a) It seems many of those who have been recruited have been taken in as
contract employees and remain so for years together. The professed
excuse bandied by the companies is that they want to keep the actual
employee count low. This excuse would have held water had not the
companies gladly confirmed the non-disabled staff members who were
recruited along with or much later than their disabled counterparts. I
can understand a company extending an employee's probation if he does
not measure up, but, extending contracts umpteen number of times seem to
take on sinister tones.

b) Simultaneously, I think these unfortunate disabled candidates also
suffer discriminatory treatment vis-a-vis their non-disabled peers in
terms of compensation and benefit, seniority etc due to the long years
they spend as contract employees.

c) It may be fashionable to explain this phenomenon as a modern trend in
employment thanks to globalisation, but, when it applies only to one
segment of (disadvantaged) employees, I prefer to call it high-handed
discrimination. India does not have a social security mechanism in place
and the best bet for any disabled resource is still the security of a
regular job. Unfortunately, the current practice seems to be denying
this precise safety net to the disabled.

I am not sure how many of Access Indians working in the IT / ITES sector
are currently suffering this discrimination silently, hoping to be
confirmed in the years to come. But, anecdotal evidence has shown me
that many of the so-called 'equal opportunity employers' who hog media
limelight with their 'diversity enrichment' programmes are major
culprits of this shameful practice. May be, a few of the silent
sufferers should speak out for the sake of other starry-eyed youngsters
who have been building castles in thin air after reading all these media
reports.

Simultaneously, can legal eagles like Kanchan and Rajesh educate us
about the current Indian laws applicable to the rights of contract
employees ? I am sure it is mandatory for a company to confirm an
employee after a particular period of being a contract employee. How
does one go about enforcing such laws and how risky would such a
procedure be ?

And, Subramony, can you smell a journalistic scoop in this issue ?


I have been an avid votary of the IT and ITES sector as possible sources
of fullfilling and well-paying careers for the visually challenged and
have even been discouraging the local youngsters from looking at the
unglamourous Government sector, but, I should admit this revelation has
forced me to revise my recommendations. In fact, I have started
wondering whether this phenomenon is restricted merely to the IT / ITES
sector or a characteristic of the entire private sector. I know of at
least one case in Kerala where a manufacturing company has been
employing a visually challenged youngster for almost 9 years as a
contract employee at half the salary he would have been entitled for in
regular service.

Please share your individual views, suggestions and experiences in this
matter. Skeletons have remained in the corporate cupboards for too long,
methinks...

Regards

R Sudhir
M: 098 472 76 126 
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