fees and make it uniform across the country by making amendment in
section 28 of the RTI act.
On 5/5/11, Sarbajit Roy <sroy.mb@gmail.com> wrote:
> Making the fees common across the country is UNREASONABLE.and also beyond
> the power of Central Govt to legislate for States --- till such time as the
> money collected does not go into the Central exchequer. If the money is
> collected by and used by the State Govt to defray its costs then only the
> State Govt can prescribe the fees.
> .
> FYI teh Allahabad High Court at one point was charging Rs.500 application
> fee and Rs 50 as copying charge per page. Hapless applicants were getting
> ZERO information out of the court despite paying such fees.
>
> On Wed, May 4, 2011 at 10:35 PM, SHASHI KUMAR.A.R. <
> rudreshtechnology@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> The Central government should see that the fee charged per page should be
>> uniform throughout the country including courts , In karnataka Courts are
>> charging Rs.3/- Per Page for A4 Size , But if a person applies under
>> court
>> rules the fee charged is Rs.1/- But in this case only litigants pertaining
>> to a case only can obtain by paying Rs.1/- Per page , States area making
>> several rules to make rti act useless and to discourage the applicants
>>
>> ARS KUMAR
>>
>>
>> On Wed, May 4, 2011 at 9:53 PM, Sarbajit Roy <sroy.mb@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>> Dear Guptaji
>>>
>>> 1) Haryana Govt charges Rs. 50 possibly because Delhi High Court (and
>>> some
>>> other High Courts) also charges Rs. 50 as application fee.
>>>
>>> 2) For many years since 2002 under Delhi RTI Act the application fee was
>>> Rs.25 and Rs.5 per page was photocopying charge. Not a single RTI
>>> activist
>>> like Arvind Kejriwal , Manish Sisiodia etc who used DRTI extensively then
>>> ever complained. Today after 9 years surely Rs. 50 and Rs.10
>>> respectively
>>> is justified by inflation even assuming a WPI of 6% each year.
>>>
>>> Sarbajit
>>>
>>>
>>> On Wed, May 4, 2011 at 8:47 PM, M.K. Gupta <mkgupta100@yahoo.co.in>wrote:
>>>
>>>> Here, Rs. 10/- per page for a photocopy is unreasonable. Every body
>>>> will agree to this but what remedial steps should be taken. Haryana
>>>> govt.
>>>> takes Rs. 50/- are RTI fee. Some state charge fee even for first appeal.
>>>>
>>>> Apparently, these tacts have been employed to discourage the applicants.
>>>>
>>>> Sarbajit ji, let all of us mull over it and find out some way.
>>>>
>>>> --- On *Wed, 4/5/11, Sarbajit Roy <sroy.mb@gmail.com>* wrote:
>>>> From: Sarbajit Roy <sroy.mb@gmail.com>
>>>> Subject: Re: [HumJanenge] Cabinet note not secret: Info panel
>>>> To: humjanenge@googlegroups.com
>>>> Date: Wednesday, 4 May, 2011, 2:02 PM
>>>>
>>>> States cannot amend the RTI Act - it is a Central Act of Parliament.
>>>> The variation in fees for photocopying charges is by the provision that
>>>> each State Govt can prescribe these fees.
>>>>
>>>> The CORE TEST (from the Act) is that these fees must be REASONABLE.
>>>>
>>>> Sarbajit
>>>>
>>>> On Wed, May 4, 2011 at 7:39 AM, Baritlum Ama
>>>> <baritlumama@gmail.com<http://in.mc946.mail.yahoo.com/mc/compose?to=baritlumama@gmail.com>
>>>> > wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Since each state has got its own prerogative to amend the Act,so the
>>>> government has increased the fee of the document from Rs,2/= to
>>>> Rs.10/= per page.The exorbhitant increase in the price of the fee has
>>>> deterred most of the activists in seeking the formation.Please guide
>>>> us how to repeal the Notification of the Govt.
>>>>
>>>> Thanks
>>>>
>>>> On 5/3/11, M.K. Gupta
>>>> <mkgupta100@yahoo.co.in<http://in.mc946.mail.yahoo.com/mc/compose?to=mkgupta100@yahoo.co.in>>
>>>> wrote:
>>>> > Cabinet note not secret: Info panel
>>>> > Maha Watchdog Overrules itself.
>>>> >
>>>> > MUMBAI: A cabinet note on the basis of which a council of minister
>>>> takes a
>>>> > decision and subsequently passes a government
>>>> > resolution is not confidential and anyone can have access to a copy of
>>>> it
>>>> > under the RTI Act.
>>>> > The verdict was passed on Friday by a full bench of the Maharashtra
>>>> > information commission, presided over by chief information
>>>> > commissioner
>>>> > Vilas Patil. The new decree overrules Vikas Patil's predecessor Suresh
>>>> > Joshi's ruling in 2006 that said a cabinet note was a confidential
>>>> document
>>>> > and a citizen could not get access to it by applying under the Right
>>>> > To
>>>> > Information Act.
>>>> > The latest decision was arrived at after a much deliberation, with
>>>> Vilas
>>>> > Patil, his Aurungabad counterpart D B Deshpande, Amravati information
>>>> > commissioner Bhaskar Patil and Nagpur information chief P W Patil
>>>> > maintaining that the note should not be kept secret. However, Navi
>>>> Mumbai
>>>> > info chief Navinkumar and his Nashik counterpart M H Shah tried to
>>>> argue it
>>>> > should not be made public.
>>>> > The view of the majority prevailed and it was decided that an RTI
>>>> applicant
>>>> > is eligible to obtain a copy of the cabinet note, an official told TOI
>>>> on
>>>> > Saturday.
>>>> > The issue was raised after a resident, Archana Gawda, in 2007, filed a
>>>> query
>>>> > under the RTI Act, seeking a copy of the cabinet note of the repeal of
>>>> the
>>>> > Urban Land Ceiling Act and the states decision on the proposal. The
>>>> general
>>>> > administration department, however, refused to send her a copy saying,
>>>> > according to the rules of business and provisions of the RTI Act, a
>>>> cabinet
>>>> > note was confidential and hence out of RTI purview.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>
>
--
Dr. Sandeep Kumar Gupta
989, Sector 15-A, Opposite bishnoi Colony, Hisar-125001, INDIA
Phone: 91-99929-31181
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