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Central Schools Would Admit Wards of Rural Postmen on Priority

As per a personal request from HRD and Education Minister Arjun Singh, recently a decision was taken at the meeting of boards of Governors of Kendriya Vidyalaya Sangathan (KVS), which runs just under a thousand public schools, to admit students from the families of postmen serving rural areas (termed as ‘grameen dak sevak’) on priority basis. Most of these grameen dak sevaks work on ad-hoc basis. The decision will take effect from the academic session of 2009.

Postmen are recruited in two categories i.e. for Urban and Rural postings. Even with the advent of Internet and other modern modes of communication, postmen remain a major link between remote rural areas and rest of this vast country.

Apart from delivering letters of near and dear ones working thousands of kilometer away, the village postman reads out letters to the illiterate and even write ones for them. Over 3.5 lakhs (three hundred fifty thousands) postmen are working in remote areas, many of which are still almost inaccessible.

But with the advent of the super communication systems like Internet, mobiles and of course the ever trusted efficient land phones, the rate  of recruitment in postal service, particularly in the rural areas  where  it is needed  most, has  been on the wane.

In view of this, earlier this year, the Indian postal service department, (IndiaPost) wrote to Communication and IT ministry to introduce some kind of incentive-other than salary-for rural postmen because of dwindling interest in the profession.

The Communication and IT ministry, in turn, wrote to the HRD and Education ministry proposing admission of wards of grameen dak sevaks in rural areas, in the KVS on a par with Central Government Employees. Earlier, this facility was not available to grameen dak sevaks as most of them were working on ad-hoc basis.

The Kendriya  Vidyalays  are   funded  fully   by the  Central Government.  These  schools     provide   quality   education almost   at  zero  cost   and   as   such   admitting  wards  of  grameen  dak  sevaks  to  these  schools  will   attract  more  people  to  this profession in postal service.

 

Santosh Kumar Agarwal: Born on 6th Nov,1947 in East Pakistan (Presently Bangladesh), migrated to India along with parents at age one. Brought up in West Bengal province of India. Graduated with Physics Honors from Scottish Church College of Calcutta and later did Master of Technology from Calcutta University securing first class fifth position in electrical engineering. .








I have interest in science and technology, law, social science, politics, religion and work as a social worker also. I can fluently read, write and speak Hindi, English and Bengali apart from a couple of local dialects. .

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