25th November 2015
On the auspicious day of Kartik Poornima, we got an
opportunity to interact with a young, dynamic, honest and candid MLA of
Khandapada - Anubhav Patnaik. He got elected to Odisha Legislative Assembly in
2014 elections, and represents the ruling party - BJD. We followed him in our
college bus to two functions where he inaugurated two new temples built in a thousands of year old temple – Nilmadhab Temple. We followed him in our university bus and were amazed to see how he manages his time - he had 25 appointments on a single day, that too when it was a holiday! Following him since the morning, we got to interact with him in one of his local party worker meet in late afternoon.
Following are some excerpts from our conversation with him.
Q.1 How important is the role of an MLA in resolving
people's grievances?
A.1 MLAs are the face of the government for the
people. Major part of my day is spent in listening to their problems and
immediately corresponding with the local bureaucracy. MLAs are facilitators in
the trickling down of govt schemes till the ground level. Recently the
implementation of the Right to Food Act is facing a lot of problems since due
errors of the field staff many eligible people have been devoid of the benefit.
This is making news everyday in some or the other part of Odisha. I have been
continuously overseeing the implementation of the scheme so that the intended
benefits reach the people.
Q.2 How do you manage your legislative and your
constituency-related work?
A.2 Legislation-related work is done by us only when
the assembly is in session. On normal days, majority of time is spent in
touring the constituency, attending public functions and listening to people's
problems. This is because for us to get re-elected, people are not going to
look at what laws are passed, even though legislations really matter in the
long run. But for people their shelter, health, children, food, pension matters
much more. How accessible and visible the MLA is in the constituency matters
much more than his participation in the assembly debates.
Q.3 What is your vision related to your constituency?
A.3 My focus is on improving the economy of the
constituency, since growth of other sectors is dependent on it. Kendrapada has
8-9 major tourist spots and we also have a well-connected road network.
Proximity to Bhubaneswar is one of the key factors that can spurt the growth of
tourism here. There is also a lot of scope of religious tourism as major spots
related to Lord Jagganath are located here.
I also plan to build a lot of embankments here as Mahanadi
floods the fields mostly. I am also focussing on alternative forms of
agriculture since that mine is a rural constituency.
Q.4 MLAs have a vision about their constituency but
the administrative setup of the system devoids them of any bureaucracy of their
own to serve them exclusively. What all options are available to put the vision
into action?
A.4 A lot of needs of the people of the constituency
are covered by the schemes of the Central and the State Government - herein the
MLA plays the role of a facilitator, making sure schemes reaches the people and
that grievances reach the bureaucracy. However for projects beyond the specified
schemes, one would have to present to the concerned Secretary, or the Minister
that the proposed projects have value\are needed. MLAs also go to the Chief
Minister who is the key and the final decision maker. A lot of MLA-proposed
development projects get passed, however taking into account the policy
priorities.
MLAs also pool in resources, reach out to, and engage with
NGOs, CSR, and International Organisations. If the constituency has the basic
infrastructure, manpower and the required skills, it is possible to bring in
corporate to invest. It also depends on how well the MLA is able to put his
case forward and project the untapped potential of his constituency. Here in
Kendrapada we are working in association with Tata Trust in various fields.
Q.5 Sir, people look upto MLAs and MPs as to someone
who will solve all their problems. But many problems are to be dealt at the
national\state level for which an MLA would have his limitations. How do you
deal with people's expectations in such cases?
A.5 Very true! People look upto MLAs as super humans.
We are also very impatient; we want our representatives to perform as soon as
possible. Grievance handling is one of the major jobs of an MLA. One should
have the power to absorb. You can’t shout back on people. Like in the Samudra
Manthan Lord Maheshwara drank the poison, its very similar to that. One has to
be an amazing, patient listener. 90% of the problems which people get to me are
not solved, only 10% are solved. But the more important part is whether the MLA
is able to listen and understand properly the grievance of the people.
Q.6 Suppose all MLAs reach the Secretariat demanding
constituency-specific allocations, how are things worked out in that case?
A.6 Policy priorities play a very significant role
and not always things are moulded according to the political considerations, or
demands of the legislators. Yet my experience says Building a repo with the
concerned Secretary and the Minister is very essential. I meet the relevant
Ministers at least 10 times a month. Personal relationships matter a lot in
getting things done.
Q.7 Please tell something about the innovative
initiative of "Child Gram Sabhas".
A.7 Started in collaboration with UNICEF, Child Gram
Sabhas is an initiative wherein we have Gram Sabhas of children and elected
representatives, and children directly share their problems with them, who take
it to the Government. Ours will be the first "child-friendly
constituency" in the country!
Q.8 Your message for aspiring politicians?
A.8 Be a man of vision. Be very clear about the role
you want to play at the Panchayat\Block\Constituency level and accordingly see
where you want to reach. People need to look upto you, repose in you as someone
who can solve their problems. As I said ultimately only a limited problems are
solved, but the confidence one's personality evokes in people is very
important.
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