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http://www.ahmedabadmirror.com/ahmedabad/others/RTI-to-the-rescue-of-Amdavadis/articleshow/45276280.cms
The Right to Information has become an effective tool for citizens to bring to 
light the inadequacies in the government functioning and seek justice. There 
are Amdavadis who have got justice after getting information under RTI, but 
there are many others whose cases have been disposed of or they have been made 
to run from department to department for information but to no avail.LABOURER 
GOT JUSTICE Ashoke Rathod, a daily wage labourer for a nursery with the Forest 
Department was denied permanent job despite adhering the rule. The rule states 
that a person working for 240 days annually for 10 years should be made 
permanent. However, when the department denied him a job, he appealed in the 
Labour Court. The department told the court that on the last year of his 
application, he had worked for 239 days. Shocked, Rathod had no option but to 
apply for RTI seeking all the data of his roster. After years of trying when he 
received that year's roster, it was revealed that he had worked 14 days extra 
and applied at Gujarat High Court which ordered the Labour Court to review his 
petition. "Finally on August, 2014, the court issued a restatement that I 
should be made permanent and provided with all the benefits that I didn't 
receive in the past 15 years due to lack of evidence," said Rathod.LAND 
GRABBERS EXPOSEDPankaj B Mehta, a 57-year-old businessman and resident of 
Vishwarekha Society, Jivraj Park raised his voice against illegal land grabbing 
in his society. He took the RTI way to collect evidence against the land 
grabbers who reside in building number 22 and 9. Through RTI he sought the plan 
of the two buildings from the Zilla Vikas Adhikari and AMC and found that the 
original plan provided by the Zilla Vikas Adhikari differed from AMC. "The 
resident of building 9 had illegally taken 85 square yard from the common road 
and the other resident had grabbed around 200 square yard common plot into his 
building," said Mehta. With this evidence he approached the Town Development 
Office. The department replied on October 20 which states that they are 
investigating the matter.HUGE BACKLOG OF APPEALS, COMPLAINTSA recent study by 
RTI Assessment and Advocacy Group (RaaG) and Samya Centre for Equity Studies 
revealed that how poorly the Act has been implemented in the Gujarat. Till 
December 31, 2013, more than 8,000 RTI appeals and complaints were pending. 
Further, the monthly disposal in the state is 898 which is very less compared 
to Maharashtra (2,560) and Karnataka (1,027). Another interesting fact, it 
takes 9 months in the state to hear an appeal. Moreover, 65% of the cases 
received are disposed of in the state. Harnesh Pandya of Janpath, an NGO 
creating awareness on the RTI Act highlighted several reasons for the long 
pending list of applications. "In around 30% cases, government bodies deny 
providing proactive disclosure of information which forces people to opt for 
RTI," he said. In around 4,000 cases, the first appeal gets rejected which 
leads to deliberate delay. "To address this delay, government needs to enforce 
the law more efficiently. Information commissioner needs to charge sheet 
officers who refuse to provide prompt and timely information," Pandya said.


                                                                                
  

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