Kalimpong, July 5: The Northeast
Frontier Railways has started withdrawing the manual train ticket quota
allotted to Kalimpong citing computerised passenger reservation system
at Durpin near here from where tickets for trains running across the
country can be booked.
Although the
computerised counter at Durpin, 3km from here, has been in existence for
many years, the NFR had been running a manual ticketing system here.
Kalimpong had been allotted a quota for booking one-way tickets for some
trains.
“This is a policy
decision of the railway board. We will keep manual quota where there is
no PRS,” said S. Sengupta, senior commercial manager, NFR. He said the
quota would be withdrawn in phases and the process would soon be over.
Kalimpong’s manual counter is authorised to sell tickets for 24 trains
that originate from or pass through New Jalpaiguri. A quota of seats is
fixed for each train. “People can buy tickets of any train in any part
of the country through computerised counters. Passengers can also buy
return tickets, which they cannot do from manual counters,” Sengupta
said.
Kalimpong’s quota
for Darjeeling Mail that runs between NJP and Sealdah daily is 22 — 16
seats in sleeper class, four in three tier AC and two in two tier AC.
Following the decision to phase out the quota, the quota of six AC seats
on the train has been withdrawn. The quota of four AC seats in the
Rajdhani Mail has also been done away with.
The railways have
manual ticket counters at Mirik and Bijanbari in Darjeeling and
Jorethang in Sikkim and they have been outsourced to private agencies.
In Kalimpong, the NFR directly runs the counter.
Sengupta said the
quota for these places had not been withdrawn since there were no
computerised counters in the region. He added that although Kalimpong
had a computerised counter at Durpin, the railways could set up a second
one depending on the demand.
The Telegraph
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