Chief Secretary of the State | |
---|---|
State Secretariat | |
Status | Head of Permanent Executive |
Abbreviation | CS |
Member of | State Civil Services Board [a] Committee of Secretaries of the state on Administration [a] State Crisis Management Committee [a] Senior Selection Board [a] |
Reports to | |
Seat | State Secretariat |
Appointer | Appointments Committee of the Cabinet The Chief Secretary is usually the senior most IAS officer of the senior most batch in the state. The appointee for the office is approved by state Chief Minister, based on appointee's ability and strong confidence with him or her. |
Term length | No fixed tenure is imposed on the office but term can be extended. |
Succession | 23rd (on the Indian order of precedence) |
Salary | ₹225,000 (US$2,700) monthly [1] [2] |
This article is part of a series on the |
Politics of India |
---|
Indiaportal |
The Chief Secretary is the top-most executive official and senior-most civil servant of the state government. [3] The Chief Secretary is the ex-officio head of the state Civil Services Board, the State Secretariat, the state cadre Indian Administrative Service and all civil services under the rules of business of the state government. The Chief Secretary acts as the principal advisor to the chief minister on all matters of state administration.
The Chief Secretary is an officer of the Indian Administrative Service. The Chief Secretary is the senior-most cadre post in the state administration, ranking 23rd on the Indian order of precedence. The Chief Secretary acts as an ex-officio secretary to the state cabinet, therefore called "Secretary to the Cabinet". The status of this post is equal to that of a Secretary to the Government of India.
The salary of Chief Secretary of United Provinces of Agra and Oudh, Punjab and Burma was fixed and was same to Joint Secretary to Government of India during the British Raj. [b] As per Warrant or Precedence of 1905, [b] Secretary to Government of India was listed together with Joint Secretary to Government of India and was ranked above the rank of Chief Secretary. [b]
Chief Secretaries are members of the Indian Administrative Service (IAS) who are the administrative head of state governments. [4] A Chief Secretary functions as the central point of interdepartmental coordination at the departmental level and is classified as being in the Apex Grade. [4] [5] Chief Secretary is considered to be 'a linchpin' in the administration. [4] [6] [7] [8] Chief Secretary of the state also acts as the ex-officio Chairman of the State Civil Service Board, which recommends transfer/postings of officers of All India Services and State Civil Services in the state. [4] [9] [10] [11] [12] [13] [14]
Traditionally, the most senior IAS officer within a state is chosen as the Chief Secretary; [15] [16] [17] [18] [19] [20] however, there are exceptions. [21] [22] [23] [24]
Chief Secretaries are assisted by Additional Chief Secretaries or Special Chief Secretaries, depending on the state, and Principal Secretaries, who are the administrative heads of departments they are assigned to.
Chief Secretaries are chosen by the state's Chief Minister. [25] [26] [27] [28] [29] State Chief Secretaries are IAS officers generally equivalent in rank to a Secretary to Government of India and are placed 23rd on Indian Order of Precedence. [30] [31]
The post of Chief Secretary of a State Government is equivalent to senior three-star rank officers in the armed forces who are in the C-in-C (Commanding-in-Chief) grade or vice chiefs of staff, holding the rank of Lieutenant General or equivalent rank in the Indian Armed Forces, and are listed as such in the Order of Precedence. [30] [31]
S.No. | State | Capital | Chief Secretary | Batch |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Andhra Pradesh | Amaravati | Neerabh Kumar Prasad, IAS | 1987 |
2 | Arunachal Pradesh | Itanagar | Manish Kumar Gupta, IAS | 1991 |
3 | Assam | Dispur | Ravi Kota, IAS [34] | 1993 |
4 | Bihar | Patna | Amrit Lal Meena, IAS | 1989 |
5 | Chhattisgarh | Raipur | Amitabh Jain, IAS | 1989 |
6 | Goa | Panaji | V. Candavelou, IAS | 1997 |
7 | Gujarat | Gandhinagar | Raj Kumar, IAS [35] | 1987 |
8 | Haryana | Chandigarh | Vivek Joshi, IAS | 1989 |
9 | Himachal Pradesh | Shimla | Prabodh Saxena, IAS | 1990 |
10 | Jharkhand | Ranchi | Alka Tiwari, IAS | 1988 |
11 | Karnataka | Bengaluru | Shalini Rajneesh, IAS | 1989 |
12 | Kerala | Thiruvananthapuram | Sarada Muraleedharan, IAS | 1990 |
13 | Madhya Pradesh | Bhopal | Anurag Jain, IAS | 1989 |
14 | Maharashtra (List) | Mumbai | Sujata Saunik, IAS | 1987 |
15 | Manipur | Imphal | Vineet Joshi, IAS | 1992 |
16 | Meghalaya | Shillong | Donald Philips Wahlang, IAS | 1993 |
17 | Mizoram | Aizawl | Khilli Ram Meena, IAS [36] | 1993 |
18 | Nagaland | Kohima | J. Alam, IAS | 1991 |
19 | Odisha | Bhubaneswar | Manoj Ahuja, IAS | 1990 |
20 | Punjab | Chandigarh | K. A. Prasad Sinha, IAS | 1992 |
21 | Rajasthan (List) | Jaipur | Sudhansh Pant, IAS | 1991 |
22 | Sikkim | Gangtok | Vijay Bhushan Pathak, IAS | 1990 |
23 | Tamil Nadu | Chennai | N. Muruganandam, IAS | 1991 |
24 | Telangana | Hyderabad | Shanthi Kumari, IAS | 1989 |
25 | Tripura | Agartala | Jitendra Kumar Sinha, IAS | 1996 |
26 | Uttar Pradesh | Lucknow | Manoj Kumar Singh, IAS | 1988 |
27 | Uttarakhand (List) | Dehradun | Radha Raturi, IAS [37] | 1988 |
28 | West Bengal | Kolkata | Manoj Pant, IAS | 1991 |
In the union territories, which are governed by Administrators, Chief Secretaries are absent. In these territories an Adviser to the Administrator is appointed by the Union Government. However, the union territories of Delhi, Jammu and Kashmir and Puducherry, which have been granted partial statehood, do have Chief Secretaries. In Delhi, Jammu and Kashmir and Puducherry, the Chief Minister chooses the Chief Secretary and is appointed by the Lieutenant Governor. [6]
Chief Secretaries and Advisers to the Administrators of Union territories, in general, are junior in rank compared to the Chief Secretaries of the States. The office bearers generally are of the rank Joint Secretary to Government of India and its equivalents. However, in Delhi and Chandigarh, the topmost civil servant is either of the ranks of Secretary to Government of India and its equivalents or Additional Secretary to Government of India and its equivalents.
S. no | Union territory | Capital | Chief Secretary/Advisor to Administrator | Batch |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Andaman and Nicobar Islands | Port Blair | Chandra Bhushan Kumar ,IAS | 1995 |
2 | Chandigarh | Chandigarh | Rajeev Verma, IAS | 1992 |
3 | Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu | Daman | Amit Singla, IAS | 2003 |
4 | Delhi | New Delhi | Dharmendra, IAS | 1989 |
5 | Jammu and Kashmir | Srinagar (May–Oct) and Jammu (Nov–Apr) | Atal Dulloo, IAS [38] | 1988 |
6 | Ladakh | Leh | Pawan Kotwal, IAS | 1994 |
7 | Lakshadweep | Kavaratti | Sandeep Kumar, IAS | 1997 |
8 | Puducherry | Pondicherry | Sharat Chauhan, IAS | 1994 |
The Indian Police Service is a civil service under the All India Services. It replaced the Indian Imperial Police in 1948, a year after India became independent from the British Empire.
The Government of India is the government of the Republic of India, located in South Asia, consisting of 36 states and union territories. The government is led by the prime minister who exercises the most executive power and selects all the other ministers. The country has been governed by a NDA-led government since 2014. The prime minister and their senior ministers belong to the Union Council of Ministers—its executive decision-making committee being the cabinet.
The Indian Administrative Service (IAS) is the administrative arm of the All India Services of Government of India. The IAS is one of the three All India Services along with the Indian Police Service and Indian Forest Service. Members of these three services serve the Government of India as well as the individual states. IAS officers are also deployed to various government establishments such as constitutional bodies, staff and line agencies, auxiliary bodies, public sector undertakings, regulatory bodies, statutory bodies and autonomous bodies.
The Finance Secretary is the administrative head of the Ministry of Finance. This post is held by senior IAS officer of the rank of Secretary to Government of India. Tuhin Kanta Pandey is the incumbent Finance Secretary.
The All India Services (AIS) comprises three Civil Services of India common to the centre and state governments, which includes the Indian Administrative Service (IAS), the Indian Police Service (IPS), and the Indian Forest Service (IFS). Civil servants recruited through All India Services by the central government are assigned to different state government cadres. Some civil servants may, later in their career, also serve the centre on deputation. Officers of these three services comply to the All India Services Rules relating to pay, conduct, leave, various allowances etc.
The Indian Forest Service (IFS) is the premier forest service of India. .The IFS is one of the three All India Services along with the Indian Administrative Service(IAS) & the Indian Police Service(IPS). It was constituted in the year 1966 under the All India Services Act, 1951.
The Ministry of Home Affairs, or simply the Home Ministry, is a ministry of the Government of India. It is mainly responsible for the maintenance of internal security and domestic policy. It is headed by the minister of home affairs.
Police services in India comprises the Indian Police Service (IPS), DANIPS, and Pondicherry Police Service recruited by the central government, along with various State Police Services recruited by state governments. As policing is a state subject, the structure and organization of police forces vary across states. In most state police forces, ranks below Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP) are considered subordinates, while DSP and above are supervisory ranks. These officers are organized in a structured hierarchical order.
The Government of Uttar Pradesh is the subnational government of the Indian state of Uttar Pradesh with the governor as its appointed constitutional head of the state by the President of India. The Governor of Uttar Pradesh is appointed for a period of five years and appoints the Chief Minister of Uttar Pradesh and their council of ministers, who are vested with the executive powers of the state. The governor remains a ceremonial head of the state, while the chief minister and their council are responsible for day-to-day government functions.
The Cabinet Secretary is the top-most executive official and senior-most civil servant of the Government of India. The Cabinet Secretary is the ex-officio head of the Civil Services Board, the Cabinet Secretariat, the Indian Administrative Service (IAS), and all Civil Services of India work under the rules of business of the government.
Joint Secretary to the Government of India is a post under the Central Staffing Scheme and the third highest non-political executive rank in the Government of India. The authority for creation of this post solely rests with the Cabinet of India.
In India, the Head of Forest Forces (HoFF) is the highest ranking officer of the Indian Forest Service (IFS), one of the three All India Services with the other two being IAS and IPS, in the Indian States and Union Territories. Each Head of Forest Forces is an IFS officer, and has the rank of Principal Chief Conservator of Forests (PCCF). The HoFF is the head of the forest department in Indian states and is selected by the Governor, based on the recommendation of the council of ministers led by the Chief Minister, from among the senior most Principal Chief Conservators of Forests in the state. The HoFF is equivalent to the State Police Chief (DGP), Chief Secretary and Lieutenant General of army in rank and influence.
The 7th Central Pay Commission (7CPC), constituted in February 2014 the principles and structure of emoluments of all central government civilian employees including defence forces in India, submitted its report on 19 November 2015. 7CPC's recommendations affects the organization, rank structure, pay, allowances and pension, of 13,86,171 armed forces personnel. This helps A salary monitoring system is designed to determine and suggest needed changes to the salaries of government employees.page 105, para 6.2.2[3]
Secretary to the Government of India, often abbreviated as Secretary, GoI, or simply as Secretary, is a post and a rank under the Central Staffing Scheme of the Government of India. The authority for the creation of this post solely rests with the Union Council of Ministers.
The Home Secretary is the administrative head of the Ministry of Home Affairs. This post is held by a senior IAS officer of the rank of Secretary to the Government of India. The current Home Secretary is Govind Mohan. All Central Forces including the Central Reserve Police Force, Central Industrial Security Force, Border Security Force and Central Police Organizations are under the Union Home Secretary.
The Defence Secretary is the administrative head of the Ministry of Defence. This post is held by a senior Indian Administrative Service of the rank of secretary to the Government of India. The current Defence Secretary is Shri. Rajesh Kumar Singh IAS.
Additional Secretary is a post and a rank under the Central Staffing Scheme of the Government of India. The authority for creation of this post solely rests with Cabinet of India.
T. S. R. Subramanian &Ors. versus Union of India and Ors., was a landmark decision of the Supreme Court of India in which the Court ruled that civil servants were not bound to follow oral directives. The case began with a public interest civil writ petition filed before the Supreme Court of India and was decided in October 2013.
The Personnel Secretary (ISO: Kārmik Saciv) popularly called as Secretary (P), is the administrative head of the Department of Personnel and Training (DoPT) under Ministry of Personnel, Public Grievances and Pensions. This post is held by senior IAS officer of the rank of Secretary to Government of India. The last Personnel Secretary is Vivek Joshi, a 1989 batch IAS officer of Haryana cadre.
The Kerala Administrative Service (KAS) is the administrative cadre of the Government of Kerala started in the year 2018. The Kerala Public Service Commission conducts exams to recruit candidates for the service. Selection is through a three-stage examination followed by a training of 18 months. It aims to build a cadre of public servants as a second line of managerial talent for effective implementation of govt services in Kerala.
{{cite web}}
: |last=
has generic name (help)