An officer who retired as Director General of Income Tax (Investigation) pointed out that such a mid-term major rejig, that too while the festive season is on and the threat of Covid has not completely abated, was uncalled for. “The norm has always been to effect annual transfers in April-May so as to let the officers settle down at their postings and allow their children to join schools at the new stations at the start of the academic session. This order would totally disrupt the schooling of the officers’ children,” she said, requesting anonymity.General Secretary of IRS Retired Officers’ Association SR Wadhwa, a 1959 Batch IRS officer who retired as Chief Commissioner of Income Tax, Madhya Pradesh, deprecated the ‘new culture’ of giving additional charge to officers. He also opined that it was centralisation of power in the PMO that was responsible for the recent trends in delayed postings and promotions etc.“This kind of thing was unheard of earlier. Now, a clear pattern has emerged that even routine and necessary decisions are not being taken at the top level in a timely manner. It is an open secret that the PMO insists on being kept in the loop, to put it mildly,” he said.National Herald had earlier reported in July, 2021 that the Centre had promoted officers to the CIT grade in April, 2021 without giving them postings, and that two dozen Principal Commissioners were promoted on December 30, 2020 without being given postings for 7 months, with the posting orders issued finally only on July 26, 2021.Another report carried on August 11, 2021 highlighted a bizarre order in which as many as 35 officers serving as Chief Commissioners of Income Tax (CCIT) and Director Generals of Income Tax (DGIT) across the country were given ‘additional charge’ of junior posts. These CCITs and DGITs were asked to discharge functions of officers at lower ranks, i.e. as Principal Commissioners of Income Tax (PCIT) and Principal Directors of Income Tax (PDIT). Moreover, most of these additional charges were located at towns and cities hundreds, if not thousands, of kilometres away.On August 21, 2021, National Herald reported that a whopping 222 IRS officers serving in the grade of Principal Commissioners of Income Tax (PCIT) across the country were reshuffled in one go, which ‘shook the entire cadre’, as a retired IRS officer put it. It also gave additional charge of as many as 79 PCIT posts to officers holding other substantive posts, though in the same grade. Though most of these officers were posted at the same stations, in some cases, the additional charges were of posts located in other cities.
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