Quote:
Originally Posted by chanda_s - the entire country is divided into some 30 odd geographic circles for a particular job. i head one of those circles and my counterpart heads another.
- the information asked is about something which is now in a district in my jurisdiction.(earlier it was with my counterpart but subsequent to rearrangement of jurisdictions it now is with me.)
- though under the same department we are independent of each other and are different public authorities with different CPIOs and Appellate authorities. we sit in different states.
|
Manoj,
Chanda has pointed out that the two are separate PA's.
Therefore no reason to bring in Section 5(4).
The first
PIO rightfully transferred the application to Mr Chanda under Section 6(3).
At most, he could have asked the applicant to redo the Postal Order and provided the address of the new
PIO (since the jurisdiction has been recently changed and reorganisation has taken place, probably the public does not know this).
Chanda, the following decision of the
CIC is crystal clear in this regard and gives a good suggestion to come out of your impasse:
http://cic.gov.in/CIC-Orders/Decision_12072006_2.pdf Under Section 6 (3) of the Act, the Public Authority to which the
application is made shall transfer the application or such part which may be
appropriate to that other Public Authority which either (i) holds the information,
or (ii) is more closely connected with the subject matter of the application. The
President’s Secretariat has correctly held that even though the report on action
taken had been submitted to the President’s Secretariat by the Ministry of Petroleum & Natural Gas, the President’s Secretariat did not qualify under either of the sub Section of Section 6 (3) to be the principal public authority dealing in the matter which was rightly construed to be the Ministry of Petroleum & Natural Gas. Therefore, while we agree with the contention of the PIO, President’s Secretariat that the application merited transfer, no transfer has in fact been made, with the PIO simply advising the applicant “to approach the Public information Officer of the Ministry o Petroleum & Natural Gas”. This has been done with no regard to the proviso of Section 6 (3) of the RTI Act, which requires that the transfer of application pursuant to this sub-Section shall be made as soon as practicable but in no case later than five days from the date of receipt of the application. In this case, the advice (and no transfer) took place on 16-3-2006 i.e. 15 days after the application was submitted to the public authority and no effort has been made to explain this delay. Section 6 (3) requires the transfer of the application to the concerned public authority, not simply advice to the applicant to make a fresh application to that other authority. It is understandable that the DD would have been returned, because it was made in the name of Accounts Officer, President’s Secretariat and therefore, uncashable by the requisite public authority, although it would have been possible for the President’s Secretariat to encash the DD and transfer the funds, if required to the concerned Ministry. However, the application itself was required to be transferred under the law and not refused. I think, based on the above, you can give the information to the applicant and at the same time, send the Postal Order to your counterpart and request him to transfer the funds to your PA.