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Sent: Saturday, August 06, 2011 5:59 PM
Subject: [TriumphOfContent] A few good women - and men




A few good women - and men
>From reviving ailing tea gardens to helping rural women grow their own
kitchen gardens, and from combating Naxalites to healing communal scars, a
few innovative district collectors are doing it all.Prasun Chaudhuri turns
the spotlight on a band of young IAS officers who have given new meaning to
the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act     

  <http://www.telegraphindia.com/1110807/images/0708PG13_Shikha.jpg>    
WORK IN PROGRESS: C. Shikha, district collector of Dharwad, Karnataka,
merged the jobs scheme with adult literacy and educating women workers on
malnutrition, pregnancy, anaemia and childcare  

Vandana Yadav had no time to revel in the beauty of the tea gardens that
surrounded her sprawling bungalow. After all, hunger was stalking Jalpaiguri
in northern Bengal. The tea industry - the mainstay of the economy there -
was going through a severe crisis. Over a dozen gardens had closed. Laid off
workers and their families - totalling over 81,000 people - were starving.

It was a Catch-22 situation: the owner couldn't run the gardens unless the
workforce was cut drastically, but the labourers had no other means of
livelihood. So Yadav, the 39-year-old district collector (DC), hit upon an
idea. She put into effect a scheme initiated by the government under the
Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA) - which
ensures at least 100 days of work in a year - to engage the workers as well
as revive the ailing gardens.

That was three years ago. Today, barring one, all Jalpaiguri gardens have
reopened. "It was a simple formula. We'd offer the workers' families 100
days of work and tea garden employers would have to employ them for 200
days, on the condition that they wouldn't retrench a single labourer," Yadav
recalls.

Six years after the MGNREGA got the President's nod on September 5, 2005,
Yadav has been demonstrating how the act - maligned in many quarters as a
money drainer - can bring about change. And she isn't the only DC - who run
the show as district programme co-ordinators under the MGNREGA - to do so.
Across the country some young IAS officers are experimenting with the scheme
to ensure that it does more than generate employment in rural India.

"These collectors have shown how a little out-of-the-box thinking can work
wonders with this unique social scheme," says D.K. Jain, joint secretary
(MGNREGA), ministry of rural development (MoRD). He points out that a
proactive district collector can mobilise the system by motivating district
officials, gram panchayats, politicians, civil society organisations as well
as the community to deliver. "The DCs are the fulcrum of administration. If
they work well, everything falls in line."

How the scheme can be tweaked for a community ravaged by ethnic hostilities
was best demonstrated by 31-year-old Jacintha Lazarus, the DC of
Churachandpur in Manipur. This district, sharing a border with Myanmar, was
hit by insurgency and ethnic strife between two warring tribes - the Paithes
and Kukis. About 50 villages had been destroyed since the groups started
clashing violently in 1997. The region had also been troubled by the
presence of 13 underground secessionist groups.

  <http://www.telegraphindia.com/1110807/images/0708PG13_kumar.jpg>     
  <http://www.telegraphindia.com/1110807/images/0708PG13_yadav.jpg>     
DYNAMIC DCs: Krishna Kumar (top), district collector of Kandhamal, Orissa,
used the jobs law to create communal harmony. He involved the panchayats,
village leaders and NGOs to build roads, ponds and irrigation wells so that
agriculture could be resumed. Vandana Yadav (below), district collector of
Jalpaiguri, offered tea garden workers' families 100 days of work; tea
garden employers would have to employ them for 200 days, on the condition
that they wouldn't retrench a single labourer.  

Lazarus used MGNREGA to bring the hostile chiefs of 64 villages to the
negotiating table and make them work together to build roads and watershed
projects and rejuvenate the environment. "The reason for taking up the
project was community mobilisation and to revive a catchment area which
houses over 2 lakh people," says Lazarus. "Eventually the tribes shook off
their mutual mistrust and joined hands to plant rubber and fruit saplings in
some areas."

As the land belongs to village chiefs in this region, she got them to sign
an agreement with the government to assure them that the government was not
out to "grab" their land. After several meetings she was even able to
convince the secessionists that the administration's motive was the public
good.

"She's done a commendable job and is getting tremendous support from the
community, including disenchanted youths," says Hemnath Rao, director,
Centre for Poverty Studies and Rural Development at the Administrative Staff
College of India (ASCI), Hyderabad.

"If someone has been able to mobilise people in such a hostile environment,
the scheme can work anywhere," says Rao, who visited Churachandpur to review
the project for the MoRD.

Krishan Kumar, a 35-year-old doctor-turned-civil servant, used the act to
generate work - and heal communal scars. The DC of Kandhamal in Orissa
utilised the scheme in a region wracked by communal riots that left 38
people dead and thousands of houses burnt along with churches three years
ago.

When he took charge, there was a gulf between the mostly Hindu Kandha tribe
and the Christian-converted Pano Dalits. "My immediate goal was to offer
them some livelihood and help them rebuild the assets damaged in the riots,"
he says.

The scheme turned out to be an ideal welfare programme. "We involved all the
stakeholders - the panchayats, village leaders and non-government
organisations - to create harmony between the hostile groups and build
roads, ponds and irrigation wells so that agriculture could be resumed,"
says Kumar. It worked - countering even Naxalites who failed to extend their
influence in the area, though they were active in the neighbouring
districts.

Sushil Kumar Lohani, director (special projects) of Orissa's panchayati raj
department, stresses that over 56 per cent of eligible families have been
covered by the MGNREGA. "That's far above the national average of 23 per
cent. And the way the district managed natural resources is now serving as a
benchmark for other districts."

Indeed, the DCs' successful attempts are being tried out elsewhere. Yadav's
model is being replicated by the central government to revive ailing tea
gardens in the Northeast. In the Jaipaiguri gardens, the MGNREGA workers
refurbish the drainage and irrigation and level the land to keep the
dilapidated gardens going even when not in use. This, in turn, helps the
owners to focus on modernisation and replace ageing tea bushes.

"After experimenting with the first garden in Chinchula, it appeared to be a
win-win situation. Eventually it became a model for other closed gardens as
we systematised this with guidelines involving self-help groups and regular
accounting," says Yadav.

Ashwani Kumar, a professor at the Tata Institute of Social Sciences in
Mumbai and member of the Central Employment Guarantee Council under the
rural development ministry, stresses that schemes have to be adapted to
counter specific problems in other areas. "There are many micro-Indias in
India. What works in Delhi may not work in remote Jalpaiguri."

Kandhamal's success, he adds, lies in the creation of "social capital" in a
conflict-ridden society. "You can't work alone; you need to build a team and
motivate it from the top," stresses Krishan Kumar.

People's empowerment is the underlying theme of the MGNREGA, says social
activist Nikhil Dey, who has closely studied the scheme's implementation
across the country. "Since the beneficiaries are directly involved and the
scheme is so designed that power is decentralised, people are free to raise
objections and demand their rights." Ashwani Kumar suggests that all
existing government welfare schemes be aligned or converged with MGNREGA for
minimising pilferage and ensuring delivery.

When it comes to convergence of schemes, C. Shikha of Karnataka's Dharwad is
perhaps far ahead of other DCs in her league. "Since so many rural workers
were coming under one umbrella to work, we thought this would be an ideal
place to implement other projects and educate villagers about health,
banking, insurance and literacy," says the 34-year old
engineer-turned-bureaucrat.

  <http://www.telegraphindia.com/1110807/images/0708PG13_field.jpg>     
TASK FORCE: Road construction in Churachandpur, Manipur 

Since migration is rampant in the region, her first challenge was to
convince villagers to stay back and work under MGNREGA. After basic works
such as road and bund construction, plantation work, lake de-silting and
social forestry got going, she started merging the scheme with other
activities such as adult literacy. The Centre's adult literacy scheme in the
state had ended in 2008, rendering 700 village-level educators jobless. "We
decided to take them on board the MGNREGA," says Shikha. They teach workers
for two hours every day.

The project has also been converged with health education. "We began
educating women, who constitute 45 per cent of the workers, on malnutrition,
pregnancy, anaemia and childcare," she says. But Nutrition Garden is the
scheme she's most proud of. "Rural women usually don't eat nutritious food.
The idea is to make a kitchen garden in every home where the family can grow
its own fruits and vegetables."

Of course, the DCs' work is by no means a bed of roses. Problems arise
especially when payments get delayed. "Although there is a mandate to pay
wages within a fortnight, I have seen workers waiting for wages for several
months even in districts with pro-active DCs," says Ashwani Kumar. But
MoRD's Jain believes the issue will be resolved. "We are in the process of
fixing the chinks in the armour. We are working on new models of fund
disbursement through banks and post offices that can speed up payments."

The attitude of officials at lower levels is another problem. Some experts
say muster roll frauds and poor record keeping are rampant even in the best
performing districts. "The mismanagement can often be traced to apathetic
babus who have lost the energy to govern. These people are sitting in the
way of young officers," says Rao of ASCI. Corrupt officials resent the fact
that the scheme has little room for pilferage. "Unlike other government
schemes, only 6 per cent is earmarked for administrative cost (salary,
infrastructure building and so on). Most of the Rs 45,000 crore is meant to
reach the poor," explains Dey.

But the MGNREGA is bringing in change, Jain holds. "For instance, in Andhra
Pradesh the MGNREGA culture has permeated so deeply that people have become
aware of their rights and are demanding things from the system." DCs, in
short, are being forced to become pro-active.

Ashwani Kumar believes the biggest success of the MGNREGA is that it has
given a voice to the poor. "This will help consolidate the 'last mile
democracy' in India - give power back to the common man with even the
poorest villager participating in governance," he says. With help from a
handful of bureaucrats, a revolution is rolling in.

Additional reporting by Varuna Verma in Dharwad
http://www.telegraphindia.com/1110807/jsp/7days/story_14347535.jsp      

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