A village around the post office
Veerappa Kallappa Bugganor,
75, of Byalahalli-K in Bhalki taluk in Karnataka’s Bidar district,
visits the village post office every day. That is not because he has
business there every day, but because he likes it.
The
stone bench in front of the post office is his favourite spot. Senior
citizens like him gather there every morning and sit and chat for hours.
“We come here because of the Dakiya; he is a friend of the village,”
says Mr. Bugganor, pointing to Mallappa Biradar, the rural postal
employee (RPE) at the one-person post office in this village of 2,500
people.
Mr. Bugganor is a beneficiary of Sandhya
Suraksha, the State government’s old-age pension scheme. The RPE comes
to his house in the first week of every month to hand over the monthly
pension of Rs. 500.
He also collects money from the
Bugganor couple for their recurring deposit. The village has 450
beneficiaries under various social security pension schemes, a majority
of them women. The post office also distributes wages to the 600
labourers in the village covered under the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural
Employment Guarantee Scheme (MGNREGS), whenever works are taken up in
the village.
For them and several others in
Byalahalli, Mr. Biradar is the one to turn to in case of need. Most of
them are unlettered, and they request him to read and write letters or
fill in application forms.
The post office accepts
telephone bill payments and taxes and other dues to government bodies
such as panchayats. While distributing letters and parcels, Mr. Biradar
has managed to enrol a hundred rural postal life insurance policies and a
similar number of savings bank or recurring deposits, over the last few
years.
The post office serves the villages of
Byalahalli-K and Neelammanahalli, and a hamlet, Neelammana halli tanda.
For Mr. Biradar, a typical day starts at 8.30. Till noon, he sits in his
office tending to paper work, sells stamps and covers, and makes or
accepts payments. Then he goes around on his moped distributing letters
or collecting payments.
“On most days of the week,
I’m required to visit all three places,” he said. The 40-year-old RPE
has been doing this for 20 years. Till two years ago, he used a bicycle
to go around.
“People in rural areas still have a lot
of faith in the postal system. The business of courier service
companies is restricted to the cities. People in the villages still
write letters and send and receive postal parcels,” Mr. Biradar pointed
out.
According him, not much has changed over the
years in the way rural post offices function. “Our work largely remains
the same. The only improvement has been the rise in the habit of saving
money among people. There was not a single savings bank account in the
post office when I joined. But now, every few months someone comes here,
seeking to open a savings account,” he said.
“The
Department of Posts should improve its infrastructure in the villages,”
says village headman Baburao Patil. “First, the post office should have
its own building. More important, it should diversify its services.
Value-added services like filling passport applications and electronic
money transfers are available only in the cities. They could be started
here,” he suggests.
More:http://bidar.karnataka.news.in/news-20120826-6704-A_village_around_the_post_office_The_Hindu.html
No comments:
Post a Comment