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PSPCL contractual staff go on strike, regular staff adopt ‘work-to-rule’ against govt’s failure to implement demands

Under the ‘work-to-rule’ policy, PSPCL's regular employees have decided not to attend to phone calls after their eight-hour work schedule and have refused to undertake any overtime, which they had previously agreed to do to manage increased workloads.

NoidaUnion leader Gurpreet Singh Mahidudan in Ludhiana said that employees’ union members submitted memoranda to the executive engineers of their respective subdivisions across the state on Monday.

Nearly 5,500 contractual employees went on strike, and regular employees of the Punjab State Power Corporation Ltd (PSPCL) adopted ‘work-to-rule’ action on Monday to protest the Punjab government’s alleged failure to implement long-pending demands.

Under the ‘work-to-rule’ policy, PSPCL’s regular employees have decided not to attend to phone calls after their eight-hour work schedule and have refused to undertake any overtime, which they had previously agreed to do to manage increased workloads.

Employees have given the ‘work-to-rule’ call under the banner of the PSEB Employees Joint Forum, Bijli Mulazam Ekta Manch Punjab, Association of Junior Engineers, Grid Sub-Station Employees Union (Regd. No. 24), Powercom/Transco Pensioners Union AITUC, and Pensioner Welfare Federation Powercom and Transco.

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The Punjab State Electricity Board (PSEB) Engineers Association has, however, not joined this protest.

Union leader Gurpreet Singh Mahidudan in Ludhiana said that employees’ union members submitted memoranda to the executive engineers of their respective subdivisions across the state on Monday.
Union leaders said that during their last meeting with Punjab Power Minister Harbhajan Singh on June 2, several of their demands were accepted in principle, but no official notification has been issued to date.

The protesting contractual employees are demanding compensation for the families of those who died in the line of duty, a job for the next of kin in such cases, and regularisation of their services.
Pensioner leaders Kewal Singh and Dharminder Kumar said, “Under the call of Central Trade Unions and the National Coordination Committee of Electricity Employees and Engineers (NCCOEEE), power employees would also participate in a nationwide strike on July 9.”

“The strike will press the government to withdraw the Electricity Amendment Bill 2025, scrapping of the proposed four labour codes created after ending 44 existing labour laws, implementation of the Old Pension Scheme, and reversal of the privatisation of government electricity companies, among other demands,” they added.

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On July 3, contractual employees and their families will stage a massive protest at the PSPCL head office in Patiala. “Over 400 employees have died on duty in line of duty over the years, and their families are yet to be compensated. Several others have been injured. We get a meagre of Rs 10,000 per month. Hence, we, along with our families, will hold a dharna in Patiala on July 3,” said Balihar Singh, president of the Contractual Employees’ Union.

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