Chief Minister Amarinder, who was speaking during the ongoing budget session here, said the government has also decided to "review and revamp" the Right to Service Commission Act to bring in greater accountability into the system.
"Revamp of the Unified Delivery Centres/Service Centres is also on the cards. While the government is also examining a proposal to establish Nayaya Panchayats to ensure easy, quick and affordable justice at grassroots. The government has also initiated the process to establish special courts to settle matters concerning NRIs, serving soldiers, drug peddlers, for speedier justice," he said
He assured of transparency and a level playing field to all interested parties in news channels and cable networks.
Alleging that governance had been a "major casualty" in the previous government, Amarinder said his government was phasing out the "pseudo reforms" unleashed by the previous government by re-engineering the processes to achieve genuine reforms focused on the welfare of the people, as well as ease and freedom of doing business in Punjab.
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"The previous government had spent over Rs 400 crore for building these centres, wherein limited service has yet been delivered," Amarinder said, while promising delivery of services at the "door-steps of each and every household".
The Chief Minister said the Right to Service Commission constituted by the previous government with 11 members had decided only 45 review petitions with an expenditure of Rs 11.82 cr during the last five years.
Referring to the "widespread corruption" in the state as a result of the "mis-governance" of the previous government, the Chief Minister said his government was re-engineering the processes and empowering the state official machinery to check corruption and ensure greater transparency in governance.
"The government has also established a Governance Ethics and Reforms Commission for comprehensive systematic reforms in the state to scrutinise all transactions of above Rs 50 cr," he said.