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Maharashtra News Updated Apr 16, 2025

Maha govt increases commission of ration shopkeepers by Rs 20 per quintal

The Maharashtra government has significantly upgraded its public distribution system by increasing ration shopkeeper commissions and introducing advanced technological tracking mechanisms. Deputy Chief Minister Ajit Pawar announced a comprehensive plan to modernize food grain distribution across rural regions. The decision involves raising shopkeeper commissions and implementing smart technologies like GPS tracking and electronic weighing machines. These reforms aim to create a more efficient and transparent food distribution network benefiting over 7 crore people in Maharashtra.

Mumbai, April 15

In a major policy decision, the Maharashtra government on Tuesday decided to increase the commission of ration shopkeepers distributing food grains to 7 crore beneficiaries across rural Maharashtra by Rs 20 per quintal - from Rs 150 to Rs 170.

Another key decision was to allow ration shops to sell 10 essential commodities approved by the Central government and supplied through NAFED.

These decisions were taken at the meeting chaired by the Deputy Chief Minister and Minister of Food and Civil Supplies, Ajit Pawar.

"Today's decision has fulfilled a long-pending demand of ration shopkeepers. Ration shops serve as the medium to distribute affordable food grains to over 80 crore people across the country, including 7 crore in Maharashtra. A robust system is in place to transport foodgrains from FCI godowns under the Central Government to ration shops in urban and rural Maharashtra," said the Deputy Chief Minister.

He added that to achieve this, a new mechanism for procurement, distribution, control, and maintenance using technologies like smart ration cards, electronic weighing machines, GPS tracking, and live monitoring will be implemented in Maharashtra.

"The system currently used in Gujarat will also be studied for reference," he added.

Pawar also informed that pending issues related to the rationing system will be resolved promptly.

He directed officials to ensure timely and systematic food grain distribution to every ration cardholder in villages and to take action against negligent officers.

Further, Pawar also announced a major decision to restructure rationing offices in Mumbai and Thane, ensuring at least one office per assembly constituency.

"The last such restructuring was done in 1980. After the new restructuring, one zonal office and five new rationing offices will be created in Mumbai and Thane, which is expected to strengthen the civil supply system in the region," said the Deputy Chief Minister.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Rahul K.

Finally some relief for ration shopkeepers! They work so hard to serve people at grassroots level. The Rs 20 increase may seem small but will make a difference when multiplied by the quantities they handle daily. 👍

Priya M.

Good move but I hope they implement proper monitoring too. Some ration shops in my area still give less quantity than what's due. The tech upgrades sound promising though!

Sunil P.

About time they restructured the Mumbai offices! The current system is so outdated. One office per assembly constituency will make things much more accessible for common people.

Anjali T.

While I appreciate the commission increase, I wish they'd focus more on quality control. Sometimes the grains we get are of very poor quality. Hope the new system addresses this too.

Vikram S.

The decision to allow selling 10 essential commodities is brilliant! Will save poor families multiple trips to different shops. More such convenience measures please 🙏

Neha R.

GPS tracking and electronic weighing machines are much needed upgrades! Hope this reduces corruption in the system. The Gujarat model reference is interesting - cross-state learning is always good.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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