Tag: delay

  • EC manages to find new excuses to delay J-K polls: Omar Abdullah

    EC manages to find new excuses to delay J-K polls: Omar Abdullah

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    Srinagar: The Election Commission seems to be in no hurry to conduct the assembly polls in Jammu and Kashmir and manages to find “new excuses to delay” the elections, National Conference vice president Omar Abdullah said on Wednesday.

    “When asked about assembly elections in J&K, the chief election commissioner acknowledged a ‘vacuum that needs to be filled’. Yet surprisingly the @ECISVEEP seems to be in no hurry to conduct elections, on the contrary, they manage to find new excuses to delay polls,” Abdullah wrote on Twitter.

    He was referring to the comments made by Chief Election Commissioner Rajiv Kumar at a presser in New Delhi called to announce the Karnataka poll dates.

    Responding to a question on the fresh special summary revision of electoral rolls in the Union territory, the CEC said, “But nonetheless, it does not disturb the scheduled part, the conducting part that depends on various other factors which we will come back to you. We are aware that there is a vacuum that needs to be filled.”

    Abdullah said it has been eight years since the last assembly elections were conducted in J-K, and five years since it had an elected government.

    “It’s plainly obvious the BJP in J&K is terrified of facing the people but it isn’t the job of the Election Commission to give the BJP a shield to cower behind,” the former chief minister said.

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    #manages #find #excuses #delay #polls #Omar #Abdullah

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Hyderabad: KTR slams Centre for delay in Uppal, Amberpet flyovers’ work

    Hyderabad: KTR slams Centre for delay in Uppal, Amberpet flyovers’ work

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    Hyderabad: Telangana MA&UD minister KT Rama Rao (KTR) on Sunday slammed the union government for the delay in the completion of Uppal, Amberpet flyover works in the city.

    KTR made the remarks as a response to a query from a Twitter user over the subject.

    @KTRBRS Sir when can we expect completion of uppal flyover. Works are going at slow pace. Lot of problem for daily commuters from narapally,” Sandeep, the Twitter user asked the minister.

    As a response, KTR said that the works of both the flyovers are ‘unfortunately’ being executed by National Highways.

    “Uppal and Amberpet flyovers are unfortunately being executed by National Highways. Both progressing at snails pace even though GHMC has completed the land acquisition as committed While we have completed 35 projects they are unable to complete even 2 !! That’s the Difference between KCR Govt and Modi Govt,” he tweeted.

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    #Hyderabad #KTR #slams #Centre #delay #Uppal #Amberpet #flyovers #work

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • ‘Critical matter, serious effects for democracy’, SC judge on delay in appointment of judges

    ‘Critical matter, serious effects for democracy’, SC judge on delay in appointment of judges

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    Bengaluru: Supreme Court judge Justice B.V. Nagarathna, who is poised to become India’s first woman Chief Justice in 2027, said on Saturday that the issue of delay in the appointment of judges could have serious effects for democracy in general, and judiciary in particular.

    Delivering the inaugural address at the fifth conference of Central government counsels from southern states in Bengaluru, Justice Nagarathna said, “The adequate manning of the judiciary at all levels by independent and fearless judges is necessary to ward off any semblance of interference from any quarter. I must say, in my most humble way, that government or executive’s inaction or delay in critical matters concerning the judiciary such as the appointment of judges could have serious effects for democracy in general, and judiciary particular.”

    She added, “In fact, in my humble view, there is a Constitutional obligation upon the executive to effectively process appointments and transfer of judges recommended by the collegium of the Supreme Court within the earliest possible time, so that there are no vacancies in courts, which could hamper effective judicial functioning. If empowerment of the judiciary is to be seriously considered, I feel that vacancies must be filled and transfers must be affected at the earliest possible time.”

    Her statement is crucial against the backdrop of increasing friction between the Supreme Court collegium and the Central government over the delay in the appointment and transfer of judges of the high courts.

    Earlier this week, the apex court collegium headed by Chief Justice of India, D.Y. Chandrachud, had taken a serious view of the delay by the Centre in taking a decision on the names reiterated by it for appointment as judges to the high courts.

    “Reiterated names ought not to be withheld or overlooked as this disturbs their seniority whereas those recommended later steal march on them. Loss of seniority of candidates recommended earlier in point of time has been noted by the collegium and is a matter of grave concern,” the SC collegium had said.

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    #Critical #matter #effects #democracy #judge #delay #appointment #judges

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Hospitals blame psych bed reopening delay on suicide precautions, staff shortages

    Hospitals blame psych bed reopening delay on suicide precautions, staff shortages

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    outbreak virus new york 41828

    That was one reason cited by Northwell Health for the continuing closure of Syosset Hospital’s 20-bed inpatient psych unit, according to a reopening plan submitted in February. The unit was repurposed for Covid patients in 2020, which required the rapid installation of electrical and gas lines that remain exposed in the rooms.

    “We cannot simply re-open the unit as a psychiatry unit as reconfiguring the rooms requires very significant time and expense,” Manish Sapra, executive director of Northwell’s behavioral health service line, wrote in the plan.

    Sapra said the hospital permanently reassigned the psych unit’s staff at that time and would need about nine months to a year to hire at least 60 people to staff it. The rest of Northwell’s 533 licensed psychiatric beds are online, according to the plan.

    NYC Health + Hospitals described a similar issue with a 24-bed unit at Elmhurst Hospital in Queens, which is being used as a medical unit and needs to be reconfigured before it can house psychiatric patients again.

    The system’s plan, which is dated Jan. 18, says it expects to restore 179 of its 253 offline beds by the end of the year. The rest will not be back online until December 2024.

    Health + Hospitals spokesperson Chris Miller said the April 1 deadline does not apply to health systems like the city’s that were already working with the state on a reopening plan.

    “NYC Health + Hospitals is working closely with the state’s Office of Mental Health to reopen 200 psychiatric beds by this December, and we are on track to meet that goal,” Miller said in a statement. “Similar to other health systems, staffing remains the biggest challenge, and we have taken a number of steps to address this — from recruitment campaigns to school loan repayment for staff to new professional development programs.”

    Other hospitals blamed staffing shortages for remaining offline beds. New York-Presbyterian reported in its January reopening plan that Weill Cornell Medical Center’s 32-bed unit could only “safely staff and accommodate” 20 patients, and another 33 beds were offline at its 233-bed Westchester Behavioral Health Center due to “provider and staff coverage constraints.”

    Catholic Health’s Mercy Hospital, which is in Nassau County, said in its plan that it can only operate 29 of its 39 licensed beds due to size constraints and staffing levels and “does not have the ability to open these beds by the April 1st deadline.”

    Key context: As part of her $1 billion mental health plan unveiled in January, Hochul directed hospitals across the state to restore 850 inpatient psychiatric beds that they repurposed or closed during the Covid-19 pandemic.

    Hochul released her plan as Democratic lawmakers across the country face increasing pressure to address escalating and often intersecting crises of homelessness and serious mental health concerns in their states and cities.

    Of the 850 beds Hochul told hospitals to reopen, approximately 200 have already been brought back online. Another 300 will become operational by the end of this year, according to the governor’s office.

    “Since Governor Hochul took action to restore psychiatric hospital beds taken offline during COVID, hospitals have developed plans to bring nearly 60% of the missing psychiatric beds online,” Avi Small, a spokesperson for Hochul, said in a statement.

    Small said the state Office of Mental Health is in active conversations with hospitals about how best to achieve compliance.

    State officials have also called on hospitals to restore beds they took offline prior to the pandemic, citing a “need for acute psychiatric inpatient capacity across the State,” according to a January memo first reported by POLITICO.

    “Restoring these beds to active status is a crucial component of the State’s plan to increase the availability of acute inpatient mental health services,” the memo said.

    Under Hochul’s budget proposal, hospitals may be fined up to $2,000 per day for each psychiatric bed that remains offline after April 1, but it is unclear whether the policy will make it into the final budget. The Assembly has proposed eliminating it, and the Senate wants to require the state to first consider mitigating factors.

    More constraints: Long wait times for a spot in other facilities or programs have also squeezed psychiatric capacity at hospitals.

    According to New York-Presbyterian’s reopening plan, its Westchester Behavioral Health Center has an average of 22 patients per day awaiting beds in state-run psychiatric institutions, which are intended for longer stays and typically take referrals from hospital psychiatric units.

    The Westchester facility also reported an average of eight patients per day awaiting placement in a residential treatment center and “routine delays” finding supportive housing units for patients who had arrived unhoused.

    Hochul has pledged to add 150 new beds to state facilities and create 3,500 new units of housing for New Yorkers with mental illnesses in the upcoming state budget. And Mayor Eric Adams has said he would build 8,000 supportive housing units.

    What’s next: Despite Hochul’s directive, some health systems are forging ahead with plans to decrease their numbers of psychiatric beds.

    Mount Sinai Beth Israel has a state license for 92 psychiatric beds but was only operating 64 of those before the pandemic. The hospital is relocating those 64 beds to the bygone nursing home Rivington House, which it is converting into a behavioral health center.

    The system will also decertify 21 psychiatric beds at the Mount Sinai Hospital on the Upper East Side, citing space needs for an expanded cancer hospital and “significant congestion” in the emergency room, according to its reopening plan submitted in January.

    But because Mount Sinai Morningside is reopening a 29-bed psychiatric unit, which had been offline for over a year before the pandemic due to planned renovations, the system claimed a net increase of eight operational psych beds — despite the decrease in licensed beds.

    The system claimed in its reopening plan that it has seen a “decline in the need for inpatient psychiatric hospitalizations for our patients” and would work to expand its psychiatric emergency departments and outpatient programs.

    A Mount Sinai spokesperson declined to comment.

    New York-Presbyterian Brooklyn Methodist Hospital has 49 psych beds across two units that were used for critical care during the pandemic. The hospital restored 24 of those last summer, but the remaining 25 beds “require further assessment and planning,” the system said in its reopening plan, noting its intent to open a behavioral health and primary care center nearby.

    “It is anticipated that this new facility will address the behavioral health needs of the service area,” system executives wrote. “The establishment of this new outpatient program will shape future considerations for inpatient psychiatric care.”

    Angela Smith Karafazli, a New York-Presbyterian spokesperson, said in a statement that the system “remains in active discussions with regulatory agencies about our proposed plan.”

    “At this point we don’t have additional info to share,” she added.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Pak finance minister says technical reasons behind delay in deal

    Pak finance minister says technical reasons behind delay in deal

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    Islamabad: Pakistan’s Finance Minister Ishaq Dar said on Monday that certain technical reasons were behind the delay in an agreement with the IMF as he clarified that his recent remarks about the country’s nuclear and missile programme were being used out of context.

    His clarification hours after the International Monetary Fund (IMF) rubbished claims that it has attached nuclear-programme-related strings for the revival of Pakistan’s much-anticipated bailout programme that has been stalled for months.

    Dar last week said in the Senate that there would be no compromise on the country’s nuclear and missile programme. He made the comment in response to Senator Raza Rabbani’s questions about the delay in signing the agreement with the IMF.

    In a press statement, Dar said that his comments with regards to Pakistan’s nuclear programme were in response to a colleague Senator’s specific question, wherein, “I emphasised that Pakistan has the sovereign right to develop its nuclear programme, as it best suits our national interests. Without any external dictation, which, by no means should in any way whatsoever be linked with the ongoing negotiations with the IMF.”

    “It is clarified that neither the IMF nor any country has attached any conditionality or made any demand from Pakistan with regard to our nuclear capability and the delay in IMF staff-level agreement is purely due to technical reasons, for which we are continuously engaged with the IMF in order to conclude it at the earliest,” he said.

    Cash-strapped Pakistan is awaiting a much-needed USD 1.1 billion tranche of funding from the Washington-based global money lender, which was originally due to be disbursed in November last year.

    The funds are part of a USD 6.5 billion bailout package the IMF approved in 2019, which analysts say is critical if Pakistan is to avoid defaulting on external debt obligations.

    Pakistan, currently in the throes of a major economic crisis, is grappling with high external debt, a weak local currency and dwindling foreign exchange reserves enough to shore up for barely one month’s imports.

    Esther Perez Ruiz, IMF’s resident representative in Islamabad, has denied attaching any strings to the External Fund Facility (EFF), according to Geo TV.

    “Regarding recent speculation that programme discussions with the authorities for the ninth review under the IMF-supported programme may have covered Pakistan’s nuclear weapons programme, I want to be categorical that there is absolutely no truth to this or any insinuated link between the past or current IMF supported programme and decision by any Pakistani government over its nuclear programme,” the report said, quoting the official.

    The IMF chief said discussions have exclusively focused on economic policies to solve Pakistan’s economy and balance of payments problems, in line with the Fund’s mandate for promoting macroeconomic and financial stability.

    Apart from the IMF, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf party’s Shah Mahmood Qureshi assailed Dar and demanded that Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif issue a policy statement on remarks of Dar.

    “No one has the right to tell us what kind of nuclear programme we should have and missiles of which range we should have. We have our atomic arsenal South Asia-specific and to ensure our defence,” he said.

    The controversy erupted after Dar assured Parliament that the federal government would not make any compromise on the country’s nuclear and missile programme despite tough economic conditions and hurdles to secure a loan from the IMF.

    “Let me assure you that nobody is going to compromise anything on the nuclear or the missile programme of Pakistan no way,” Dar told Parliament last week.

    Dar also indirectly held Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party and its chief Imran Khan responsible for the delay in the IMF funding as he blamed the then government of Imran Khan for agreeing on tough conditions to get the funding.

    Separately, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said that Pakistan’s nuclear programme was being “jealously guarded by the state”.

    Pakistan has been hosting the IMF mission since early February to negotiate the terms of the deal, including the adoption of policy measures to manage its fiscal deficit ahead of the annual budget due around June.

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    #Pak #finance #minister #technical #reasons #delay #deal

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Air India cancels Chicago-Delhi flight after prolonged delay, passengers fume

    Air India cancels Chicago-Delhi flight after prolonged delay, passengers fume

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    New Delhi: A prolonged delay, and eventual cancellation, of the Air India flight from Chicago to Delhi left passengers fuming, as they complained that they were kept in the dark about the delays and the airline did not inform them about alternate arrangements to reach their destination till Wednesday evening.

    AI 126 flight from Chicago to Delhi was scheduled to depart on March 14 at 1.30 p.m. (local time) and reach Delhi airport on 2.20 p.m. on March 15.

    However, its nearly 300 passengers were waiting at the Chicago airport on Wednesday late evening and they were clueless about any alternate arrangement.

    “The flight is over 22 hours late and we are still at the airport. There is nobody to guide us. The airline staff are hardly informing anything. We don’t know when we will be able to reach Delhi,” said Gopal Krishan Solanki who was waiting for information about the flight.

    Sources claimed that amongst the passengers is a person who lost his mother and he was to arrive for the last rites.

    Solanki said the air passengers were provided with a hotel, but it was arranged very late. “We had to wait here for a long time and there was no information about the fight and accommodation. We were told about the hotel very late,” he added.

    Meanwhile, Air India has said that the flight has been cancelled due to technical reasons. “Air India flight AI 126 on March 14, 2023 had to be cancelled due to technical reasons. The affected passengers were offered all-round support and are being accommodated on alternate flights. We sincerely regret the inconvenience caused to our passengers,” said a Air India spokesperson on Wednesday.

    A total of 1,171 flights were cancelled during the year 2022 due to technical reasons, as against 931 in 2021 and 1,481 in 2020, the government told Parliament on Tuesday.

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    #Air #India #cancels #ChicagoDelhi #flight #prolonged #delay #passengers #fume

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Telangana govt vs Governor: SC to hear govt’s plea over delay in assent to bills

    Telangana govt vs Governor: SC to hear govt’s plea over delay in assent to bills

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    New Delhi: The Supreme Court on Tuesday agreed to examine a plea filed by the Telangana government seeking directions to Governor Tamilisai Soundararajan to clear ten bills passed by the legislative Assembly, which are awaiting her assent.

    Senior advocate Dushyant Dave mentioned the matter before a bench headed by Chief Justice of India D.Y. Chandrachud for urgent listing, saying that “several bills are stuck”. After hearing brief submissions, the bench agreed to list the matter on March 20.

    Earlier this month, the Telangana government had approached the Supreme Court seeking direction to the Governor to give her approval to the bills passed by the state legislature. In a writ petition, the state government has brought to the notice of the Supreme Court that 10 bills are pending with Raj Bhavan. While seven bills are pending since September 2022, three bills were sent to the Governor last month for her approval. The Secretary to the Governor and the Union Law Ministry has been made respondents in the case.

    The plea contended that Article 200 of the Constitution empowers the Governor to either assent to a Bill passed by the state legislature or to withhold assent therefrom or to reserve the Bill for consideration of the President and this power is however to be exercised “as soon as possible”.

    This is the second time that the Bharat Rashtra Samithi (BRS) government has knocked on the court’s door against the Governor.

    Last month, the government moved the Telangana High Court seeking direction to the Governor to give her approval to the state Budget for 2023-24. The court, however, had suggested both sides sort out the issue amicably.

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    #Telangana #govt #Governor #hear #govts #plea #delay #assent #bills

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • DU teachers sit on hunger strike over delay in forming governing bodies

    DU teachers sit on hunger strike over delay in forming governing bodies

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    New Delhi: Several teachers of Delhi University sat on a 12-hour hunger strike over delay in forming governing bodies in 28 colleges funded by the Arvind Kejriwal government.

    The strike called by the AAP teachers wing — Academics for Action & Development Delhi Teachers Association (AADTA) — started at around 7 am at Arts Faculty.

    They also demanded the absorption of ad hoc and temporary teachers working in various Delhi University colleges.

    Several members of the Executive Council, Academic Council and Finance Committee of the varsity participated in the strike. Some former members and chairpersons of the governing bodies (GB) were also part of the demonstration, AADTA said in a statement.

    “The large scale participation shows the anger of teaching community over the way the university administration has politicised the GB formation in these colleges and the recruitment process in a narrow partisan manner,” it said.

    Last month, the Delhi government had sent the list of its nominees for the Governing Bodies formation to the university and during the Executive Council meeting on February 3, the list was not brought for approval, the statement said.

    When Executive Council members Seema Das and R S Pawar took up the matter in the meeting, DU Vice Chancellor Yogesh Singh said there were some technical problems, the AADTA claimed.

    “In mid-February, the university administration arbitrarily sent three GB nominees to Bharati College, violating the varsity’s Statute 30(1) and EC Resolution 51 (2012). When the policy of university administration is to continue with the massive displacements to the tune of 70 per cent ad hoc and temporary teachers, it is making all efforts to evade accountability to the elected government,” the AADTA said in the statement.

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    #teachers #sit #hunger #strike #delay #forming #governing #bodies

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Telangana govt moves SC against Guv’s delay in approving pending bills

    Telangana govt moves SC against Guv’s delay in approving pending bills

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    Hyderabad: A writ petition was filed by the Telangana government officials seeking directions to the state’s Governor for approval of ten pending key bills.

    Chief secretary A Santhi Kumari moved the Supreme Court on the state government’s behalf naming Tamilisai Soundararajan in the place of the respondent in her petition.

    The petitioner claimed that bills pertaining to the state government were kept pending for more than six months in the Raj Bhavan and were not being cleared by the Governor, who reportedly refused to clarify the inordinate delay.

    The Governor’s act of delaying bill approvals that were important for the functioning of state matters was criticised by ministers of the state.

    The petition is likely to be heard on March 3.

    The rift between the Telangana Governor and the KCR-led government has deepened over the last two years.

    The BRS leaders recently anticipated a crisis as seven Bills passed by the Assembly and Council have been languishing at the Raj Bhavan since September 2022.

    The state government even knocked on the door of the Telangana High Court in January seeking a direction from the governor to approve the state budget for 2023-24.

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    #Telangana #govt #moves #Guvs #delay #approving #pending #bills

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Restore Statehood Without Any Delay: Karan Singh

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    SRINAGAR: Senior Congress leader and former Sadar-e-Riyasat of erstwhile J&K State, Dr. Karan Singh has said that there is a lack of communication between public and bureaucrats in the Union Territory (UT) of Jammu and Kashmir.

    He stated that assembly elections should be held in J&K in a free and fair manner and Statehood should be restored to the UT without any delay.

    When asked to comment on the bifurcation of J&K State into two Union Territories, he said, “We should look ahead rather than looking back and added that same remained his principle in life.”

    Replying to a question of taking back the regions of J&K occupied by Pakistan, he said that it was not easy as the same could not be materialized without a war which only brings deaths and destruction.

    Singh said that forceful religious conversions are not good things be these happen in India or in Pakistan. He was speaking in a session on Vedanta organized by FICCI FLO J&K wherein he educated a gathering on Gyan Yoga, Bhakti Yoga, Karam Yoga, Raj Yoga and also touched Hath Yoga.

     

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    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )