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08-14-2025     3 رجب 1440

Grievance Redress Mechanisms

This is the spirit of CPGRAMS—speed, transparency, and accessibility. Yet, challenges remain: delays in response, generic replies, and lack of follow-up in some cases. For the platform to truly shine, departments must treat grievances not as “files to close” but as stories of real people in distress.

August 11, 2025 | Mohammad Muslim

In any democracy, the distance between the citizen and the state is measured not just in kilometres, but in trust. When a streetlight stays broken for months, when a pension application gathers dust, when ration cards are delayed, or when a government office remains unresponsive—trust erodes. That is why grievance redress mechanisms are more than administrative tools; they are bridges to restore faith.

In India, three platforms—Centralised Public Grievance Redress and Monitoring System (CPGRAMS), the Right to Information Act (RTI), and the Lieutenant Governor’s (LG) Portal—play pivotal roles in helping citizens voice concerns, seek accountability, and demand action. Yet their effectiveness lies not just in the systems themselves, but in how people engage with them, and how institutions respond.

CPGRAMS – A Digital Ear for Public Complaints

Launched by the Government of India, CPGRAMS is an online platform designed to receive, monitor, and resolve grievances lodged by the public. The promise is simple: a citizen anywhere in the country should be able to raise a complaint about a central government department without travelling to the capital or navigating bureaucratic corridors.
For instance, consider Suresh, a retired railway worker in a small town in Uttar Pradesh. After months of waiting for his pension arrears, he lodged a complaint on CPGRAMS with little expectation. To his surprise, within four weeks, he received a call from the concerned department, followed by a credit in his bank account. “I didn’t believe it would work. But it did. It gave me hope,” he says.
This is the spirit of CPGRAMS—speed, transparency, and accessibility. Yet, challenges remain: delays in response, generic replies, and lack of follow-up in some cases. For the platform to truly shine, departments must treat grievances not as “files to close” but as stories of real people in distress.

 

RTI – A Tool for Empowered Citizens


The Right to Information Act, 2005 revolutionised the way Indians interact with the state. Before RTI, much of the government’s functioning remained hidden behind walls of secrecy. With RTI, every citizen gained the legal right to ask: Why was my application rejected? How were funds used in my ward? Who is responsible for a delay?
Nasreen, a schoolteacher from Kerala, used RTI to discover why her village’s water supply project stalled despite sanctioned funds. Her application revealed that the contractor had abandoned the work midway. The community used this information to press for completion, and within months, the project was revived.
The beauty of RTI is its simplicity—it can be handwritten, submitted in local languages, and sent by post. But it is more than a paperwork process; it is a mindset shift. It tells the citizen: You have the right to know. Your government is answerable to you.
However, RTI is only as strong as the transparency culture it fosters. Delayed responses, evasive answers, and under-resourced information commissions can blunt its edge. Strengthening penalties for non-compliance and training officials to embrace transparency can keep RTI alive and potent.


LG Portal – Localised Redress for Urban Governance


While CPGRAMS and RTI operate nationally, the Lieutenant Governor’s Portal in Union Territories like Delhi, Jammu & Kashmir, and others offers a more localised grievance redress mechanism. The idea is to create a direct link between citizens and the top administrative authority in the UT, allowing issues like sanitation, water supply, traffic management, and public service delivery to be escalated and tracked.
In Srinagar, for example, Shabir Ahmad, a shopkeeper, reported a persistent garbage dumping problem in his locality via the LG Portal. Within days, the municipal team arrived, cleaned the site, and placed waste bins. “Earlier, I had to visit the municipal office multiple times. Now, one online submission was enough,” Shabir notes.
The LG Portal’s strength lies In visibility—complaints are publicly listed, and citizens can track the progress of their submissions. But as with all grievance systems, timely and genuine resolution is key. A closed case without a real solution is worse than no case at all, for it breeds deeper cynicism.
While CPGRAMS, RTI, and LG Portal are valuable tools, they cannot thrive in isolation. Effective grievance redress demands a cultural change in governance—where complaints are not seen as irritants but as opportunities to improve service delivery.
Equally, citizens must see themselves not as passive recipients of services but as active participants in governance. Filing a grievance is not an act of confrontation; it is an act of co-creation—helping the system correct itself.
It is easy to think of these mechanisms as “online forms” or “laws in books.” But behind every grievance is a lived reality—an elderly widow waiting for her widow pension, a student unable to get her scholarship, a farmer struggling for crop insurance, a shopkeeper burdened by unjust fines.
The systems must remember the human face of every complaint. That means:

Clear Communication

Citizens should know the status of their grievance without chasing officials.

Empathy in action Departments should go beyond technical closure and ensure real problem-solving.

Accountability Loops

If a grievance is not resolved, there should be consequences for inaction.
The health of a democracy is not measured by the absence of grievances, it is measured by how those grievances are heard and addressed. CPGRAMS, RTI, and the LG Portal are the arteries of that democratic heartbeat, ensuring that no citizen is too distant, too small, or too powerless to be heard.
But their success depends on the same principle that underpins democracy itself: mutual respect between the governed and those who govern. If we can see a grievance not as a problem but as a possibility, a possibility to fix, to improve, and to serve, then we move closer to a governance system that is truly of the people, by the people, for the people.

 


Email:-------------------------muhammadmuslimbhat@gmail.com

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Grievance Redress Mechanisms

This is the spirit of CPGRAMS—speed, transparency, and accessibility. Yet, challenges remain: delays in response, generic replies, and lack of follow-up in some cases. For the platform to truly shine, departments must treat grievances not as “files to close” but as stories of real people in distress.

August 11, 2025 | Mohammad Muslim

In any democracy, the distance between the citizen and the state is measured not just in kilometres, but in trust. When a streetlight stays broken for months, when a pension application gathers dust, when ration cards are delayed, or when a government office remains unresponsive—trust erodes. That is why grievance redress mechanisms are more than administrative tools; they are bridges to restore faith.

In India, three platforms—Centralised Public Grievance Redress and Monitoring System (CPGRAMS), the Right to Information Act (RTI), and the Lieutenant Governor’s (LG) Portal—play pivotal roles in helping citizens voice concerns, seek accountability, and demand action. Yet their effectiveness lies not just in the systems themselves, but in how people engage with them, and how institutions respond.

CPGRAMS – A Digital Ear for Public Complaints

Launched by the Government of India, CPGRAMS is an online platform designed to receive, monitor, and resolve grievances lodged by the public. The promise is simple: a citizen anywhere in the country should be able to raise a complaint about a central government department without travelling to the capital or navigating bureaucratic corridors.
For instance, consider Suresh, a retired railway worker in a small town in Uttar Pradesh. After months of waiting for his pension arrears, he lodged a complaint on CPGRAMS with little expectation. To his surprise, within four weeks, he received a call from the concerned department, followed by a credit in his bank account. “I didn’t believe it would work. But it did. It gave me hope,” he says.
This is the spirit of CPGRAMS—speed, transparency, and accessibility. Yet, challenges remain: delays in response, generic replies, and lack of follow-up in some cases. For the platform to truly shine, departments must treat grievances not as “files to close” but as stories of real people in distress.

 

RTI – A Tool for Empowered Citizens


The Right to Information Act, 2005 revolutionised the way Indians interact with the state. Before RTI, much of the government’s functioning remained hidden behind walls of secrecy. With RTI, every citizen gained the legal right to ask: Why was my application rejected? How were funds used in my ward? Who is responsible for a delay?
Nasreen, a schoolteacher from Kerala, used RTI to discover why her village’s water supply project stalled despite sanctioned funds. Her application revealed that the contractor had abandoned the work midway. The community used this information to press for completion, and within months, the project was revived.
The beauty of RTI is its simplicity—it can be handwritten, submitted in local languages, and sent by post. But it is more than a paperwork process; it is a mindset shift. It tells the citizen: You have the right to know. Your government is answerable to you.
However, RTI is only as strong as the transparency culture it fosters. Delayed responses, evasive answers, and under-resourced information commissions can blunt its edge. Strengthening penalties for non-compliance and training officials to embrace transparency can keep RTI alive and potent.


LG Portal – Localised Redress for Urban Governance


While CPGRAMS and RTI operate nationally, the Lieutenant Governor’s Portal in Union Territories like Delhi, Jammu & Kashmir, and others offers a more localised grievance redress mechanism. The idea is to create a direct link between citizens and the top administrative authority in the UT, allowing issues like sanitation, water supply, traffic management, and public service delivery to be escalated and tracked.
In Srinagar, for example, Shabir Ahmad, a shopkeeper, reported a persistent garbage dumping problem in his locality via the LG Portal. Within days, the municipal team arrived, cleaned the site, and placed waste bins. “Earlier, I had to visit the municipal office multiple times. Now, one online submission was enough,” Shabir notes.
The LG Portal’s strength lies In visibility—complaints are publicly listed, and citizens can track the progress of their submissions. But as with all grievance systems, timely and genuine resolution is key. A closed case without a real solution is worse than no case at all, for it breeds deeper cynicism.
While CPGRAMS, RTI, and LG Portal are valuable tools, they cannot thrive in isolation. Effective grievance redress demands a cultural change in governance—where complaints are not seen as irritants but as opportunities to improve service delivery.
Equally, citizens must see themselves not as passive recipients of services but as active participants in governance. Filing a grievance is not an act of confrontation; it is an act of co-creation—helping the system correct itself.
It is easy to think of these mechanisms as “online forms” or “laws in books.” But behind every grievance is a lived reality—an elderly widow waiting for her widow pension, a student unable to get her scholarship, a farmer struggling for crop insurance, a shopkeeper burdened by unjust fines.
The systems must remember the human face of every complaint. That means:

Clear Communication

Citizens should know the status of their grievance without chasing officials.

Empathy in action Departments should go beyond technical closure and ensure real problem-solving.

Accountability Loops

If a grievance is not resolved, there should be consequences for inaction.
The health of a democracy is not measured by the absence of grievances, it is measured by how those grievances are heard and addressed. CPGRAMS, RTI, and the LG Portal are the arteries of that democratic heartbeat, ensuring that no citizen is too distant, too small, or too powerless to be heard.
But their success depends on the same principle that underpins democracy itself: mutual respect between the governed and those who govern. If we can see a grievance not as a problem but as a possibility, a possibility to fix, to improve, and to serve, then we move closer to a governance system that is truly of the people, by the people, for the people.

 


Email:-------------------------muhammadmuslimbhat@gmail.com


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