Next time a customer enters a ration shop, the
shop-owner might just ask him to wait while he uses his cellphone to
take his photograph. This is part of a technique called random picture
matching and will be used by the Department of Food and Civil Supplies
to weed out bogus cards and ineligible beneficiaries in the State.
How it works
The
department will maintain a database of eligible beneficiaries. Food
Inspectors and other officials will have access to the database.
On
the other end, fair price shop-owners have to download an app on their
phone, which will suggest, at random, which customer’s photo should be
taken. The app will recognise all the members of a beneficiary family
and not just the head.
The shop-owners have to take
their phones to the tashildar’s office at the end of every month. The
photographs will then be cross-checked with the database. If the
shop-owner is found to have sold produce to bogus beneficiaries, he
(shop-owner) will face action, which will include withholding of his
allotment for the next month.
This is among several
technological tools that the department will use to reduce
irregularities, while issuing ration cards and distributing produce such
as foodgrains. “We have set in motion the process to start using random
picture matching,” Harsha Gupta, Commissioner, Food and Civil Supplies,
told The Hindu. “We will help shop-owners buy low-end smartphones and use this application,” he said.
The
second important intervention will be the convergence of data from
various departments to weed out ineligible ration card holders.
The
Food and Civil Supplies Department will cross-verify its database of
BPL households with the databases of beneficiaries of Revenue
Department’s social security schemes and of the Agriculture Department’s
subsidy schemes.
“We will cross-check our household
data with the National Population Register and the Election Commission
data. We have already begun consultations with the officials concerned,”
Mr. Gupta said.
This will not only help eliminate
errors, but also act as third-party verification of the Food and Civil
Supplies Department’s database, according to him.
The
department will also begin using lorries fitted with GPS and GPRS
devices to monitor their movement. “We will have level indicators inside
kerosene lorries to monitor the quantity being carried. We will also
have digital weighing scales for lorries that leave warehouses,” he
said.
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