New Delhi: With the current VRS plan expected to cut BSNL's staff by almost half, the DoT has instructed the corporation to put in place measures to ensure business continuity and smooth transition, particularly for manning telephone exchanges in rural areas.
At present, various options are being discussed for the transition period.
A source in the Department of Telecom (DoT) told PTI said the matter requires urgent focus, and meetings are on to find a solution to ensure there is no impact on the day-to-day manning of exchanges and other operations, once the VRS plan concludes.
On Friday evening, barely four days after the scheme was rolled out, the number of BSNL employees opting for VRS had swelled to 57,000, and the figures, when combined with those of state-owned MTNL, had exceeded 60,000.
In all, nearly one lakh BSNL employees are eligible for the VRS out of its total staff strength of about 1.50 lakh. BSNL's internal target for VRS is pegged at 77,000 employees, which essentially means that if the VRS reaches the full target, the staff strength will come down by half. The effective date of voluntary retirement under the present scheme is January 31, 2020.
When contacted, BSNL Chairman and MD P K Purwar confirmed that discussions have been initiated on the issue and said the corporation is planning business re-engineering and business continuity.
"We have to work meticulously because we have now started taking the data, which SSA, which unit, how many people are taking VRS. We will still be left with about 80,000 people. So, the numbers are not less but it will be almost half. The work culture will also have to change," Purwar said.
The DoT source said that even outsourcing certain operations will require time, including a transition period of 2-3 months after finalisation of tender, and given that the VRS will come into effect from January, a solution will have to arrive at soon.
Several options are on the discussion table, the source said one such solution being debated is whether some of the personnel opting for VRS can be roped in as consultants at a lower cost.