Key Points

Punjab is facing a significant power crisis as over 15,000 electricity employees embark on a mass leave protest. The strike, organized by Bijli Ekta Manch, challenges the government with demands ranging from pay revisions to pension scheme restoration. Power Minister Harbhajan Singh has appealed to workers to return, emphasizing the potential widespread disruption to essential services. Despite negotiations and government concessions, the standoff continues to threaten the state's power infrastructure.

Key Points: Punjab Power Crisis Escalates with 15,000 Workers Mass Leave

  • 15,000 power employees join mass leave protest across Punjab
  • Strike impacts residential, industrial, and agricultural sectors
  • Government offers concessions on key employee demands
  • Power Minister urges workers to resume duties for public interest
3 min read

Himachal power crisis: 15,000 employees on mass leave; Minister urges them to return

Punjab power employees strike disrupts state's electricity supply amid demands for pay, pension, and job security reforms

"Given that most of the demands have been addressed, it is now neither fair nor reasonable for employees to continue striking - Harbhajan Singh, Power Minister"

Chandigarh, Aug 11

More than 15,000 employees of the Punjab State Power Corporation Ltd and Punjab State Power Transmission Ltd on Monday went on a three-day mass leave under the banner of Bijli Ekta Manch and Punjab State Employees Federation (PSEB) joint forum, pressing for their long-pending demands.

The strike will continue until midnight on August 13, impacting residential, industry and agricultural sectors across the state.

The employees joined the strike after the meeting with the government failed to yield any outcome on their long-pending demands that include the release of 13 per cent pending dearness allowance, restoration of the old pension scheme, correction of anomalies in pay and pension revisions, besides regularisation of contract staff, and recruitment to nearly 50,000 vacant posts.

Power Minister Harbhajan Singh ETO has appealed to employees of Powercom to end their agitation and return to work in view of the larger public interest, especially at the time of high power demand.

The minister emphasised that the uninterrupted power supply is crucial for households, agriculture, and industrial sectors; thus, the agitating employees should resume their duties.

He said the prolonged strikes could cause significant hardship to millions of consumers, which should not be suffered at any cost. He assured the employees that the government, under the leadership of Chief Minister Bhagwant Mann, has shown utmost sincerity and responsiveness in addressing their concerns.

Giving details on recent developments, Harbhajan Singh said a crucial meeting was convened on August 10 in Chandigarh among the PSPCL administration, representatives of the Powercom employees Joint Forum and Bijli Mulazam Ekta Manch, chaired jointly by him and the Finance Minister Harpal Cheema.

During the deliberations, the PSPCL administration gave its consent to accept almost all key demands put forth by the employees.

The demands include the creation of new posts and filling of existing vacancies, an increase in ex-gratia amount, stoppage recovery in compassionate cases till the final decision, provision of cashless medical facilities to employees, release of pending allowances, clearance of overdue overtime payments for grid substation staff and some cases of pension revisions, said the minister.

The government has also promised special attention towards repairing and maintaining PSPCL buildings, he added.

"Given that most of the demands have been addressed thus it is now neither fair nor reasonable for employees to continue striking," said the minister.

He stressed that the government is committed to the well-being of its employees and is always ready to resolve their issues amicably.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Sarah B
The government should have addressed these issues before they escalated. Pending DA for years is unacceptable. Employees have families to feed too. But now common people are suffering - classic case of administration failure.
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Ananya R
My uncle works in PSPCL. They've been patient for 3 years! The old pension scheme is crucial for their future. Government only acts when there's a crisis. Kya humare neta kabhi samajhdaar honge? 🤦‍♀️
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Karthik V
Both sides need to compromise. Employees should return now that most demands are met, and government must deliver on promises this time. No more false assurances! Our paddy crops can't wait for their politics to settle.
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Priya S
This affects small businesses the most. My tailoring shop can't operate without electricity. Employees have rights but so do we as paying customers. Government should have contingency plans for such situations.
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Michael C
As someone who's worked in India's power sector, I must say the demands are reasonable. The real issue is contract staff working for years without job security. Hope this brings permanent solutions, not temporary fixes.
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Nisha Z
The minister says "most demands addressed" but employees still protesting. Clearly there's gap in communication. Why not live telecast negotiations so public knows truth

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