Darjeeling, Sept. 27: The GTA
Sabha has proposed to pay a monthly honorarium of Rs 50,000 to its chief
executive, rs 25,000 to elected members and Rs 5,000 to nominated
members.
The payment is
subject to the approval of the state government. The GTA Sabha has 45
elected members and five nominated members, three of whom are from the
Trinamul Congress.
Sources have said
the honorarium for the chief executive is equivalent to the monthly
salary enjoyed by a Grade-A official in the state government.
“The deputy
chief’s honorarium has been capped at Rs 45,000, while the chairman and
deputy chairman of the Sabha will get Rs 40,000 and Rs 35,000
respectively,” said a source.
The 14 executive members will get an honorarium of Rs 30,000 each per month.
“The rest of the elected members will get Rs 25,000 a month,” said the source.
However, each of the five nominees will get only Rs 5,000, that is one-fifth of the amount fixed for the elected members.
Saumitra Mohan,
the principal secretary to the GTA, said: “It is true that the GTA Sabha
has fixed different honorarium scales and this will be sent to the
state government for its approval.”
Apart from the
honorarium, the GTA members will be entitled to Rs 500 for attending a
Sabha meeting, apart from travel allowances that will be reimbursed on
the production of bills. There is no ceiling on the travel allowance.
Unlike the MLAs
and the MPs, GTA Sabha members are not entitled to any allowance. An MLA
in Bengal gets Rs 5,000 as allowance, Rs 4,000 as constituency
allowance and Rs 3,000 as telephone allowance.
For ministers,
there is a daily allowance of Rs 1,000 for every day spent in office or
outside doing official work. So, they can earn an additional allowance
of up to Rs 31,000 a month (in a 31-day month), besides the salary.
The salary of a
minister of state is Rs 7,200, Rs 7,500 for a cabinet minister and Rs
8,300 for the chief minister. The ministers also get full reimbursement
of electricity bills both in Calcutta and their houses in the districts
and cooking gas connections.
Sources said since
the government had to give its nod to the honorariums for the GTA
members, the state could increase the amount for the nominees, probably
making it equivalent to the elected members’ pay.
A senior government official said the honorariums for the GTA members was high, but it was not illegitimate.
“Functioning like
the Assembly, on a much smaller scale, the GTA Sabha can take such
decisions within their budgetary allocation,” he said.
From the Telegraph
From the Telegraph
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