Tirumala Tirupati Devasthanams (TTD)

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Labour laws, labour welfare

Tirupati's labour rules aren't divine

Brinda Karat The Times of India Nov 16 2014


The country's richest shrine underpays and overworks the army of workers who keep it clean, run its kitchens and roll its famous laddoos, says CPM leader Brinda Karat.

If you have been to Tirupati, you would have been amazed at the tremendous feat of management of the endless stream of pilgrims. There is a daily flow of at least 40,000 pilgrims and on auspicious days, this number reaches a lakh or more.

The services offered to pilgrims are also quite unique. On any given day the eight large dining halls serve 40,000 free meals. There are around 600 barbers who also offer not only free services, but also a free blade per pilgrim, to allow them to keep their pledge of tonsuring their heads for Lord Venkateswara.

About 20,000 pilgrims avail of these services every day. There are 7,000 rooms available for residential purposes on payment. It is the only temple in the world that holds a geographical tag for its prasad -the famous laddoo.

The entire area is clean and orderly in spite of the large crowds.

Something to be proud of. Except that behind the order is utter disorder.

This temple is the richest in the country, a conservative estimate puts the annual revenue at Rs 2,500 crore. This is excluding its other huge assets. Despite this, the labour practices in Tirupati are grossly unfair. Of the 20,000 employees, 12,000 are on a contract basis even though they perform jobs of a permanent nature.Most of them have been working for the temple for 10 years.

Look at the plight of those making the famous laddoos. Only Vaishnava Brahmins are allowed to actually make the laddoos. They have a team of assistants who have to be Brahmins, though not necessarily Vaishnavas. It is said that an IAS officer, earlier in charge, who today holds an important position in the AP administration, actually removed 50 or so non-Vaishnava Brahmins who were making the prasad.

Why should laddoo makers have to belong to any particular caste? Aren't casteist practices prohibited by law? All told, there are 420 laddoo makers and their assistants who together make 1.25 lakh laddoos a day. The larger laddoo should weigh 750 gm while the smaller one should weigh 75 gm. Such is the skill that without any weighing machine the laddoo makers get the weight dead right each time.

In 1987, when a new system was set in place, there was a struggle by the laddoo makers to be absorbed as permanent employees and some went to court. Ten years later, the court ruled in favour of their regularization but the verdict was not implemented. It took another ten years for the employees to be regularized. But only those who were part of the initial case got the benefits. So at present, there are only 100 regular employees earning a monthly salary of Rs 35,000 and benefits for laddoo-making while the majority gets just Rs 15,000 a month with negligible benefits for the same job. They are not entitled to any paid leave and if they take leave for an emergency their salaries are cut.

Things are worse in other departments. The worst is the plight of the 4,000 cleaners and sanitation workers.Most of them are dalits. Any time of the day or night you will see women and men in uniforms with brooms, cleaning up after the pilgrims have left, making sure the toilets are clean. What are they paid? Less than Rs 6,500 a month. They have no benefits, no ESI, no provident fund and not even a weekly off. This virtual slave labour is employed by Sulabh International which has got one of the contracts for cleaning. The value of the contract is a closely guarded secret as RTI applications on the issue have been blocked. In any case, according to the law, it is the temple management as the principal employer that is responsible for the conditions of the workers. Incidentally, it is this clause of the responsibility of the principal employer that the Central Government wants to eliminate as has been done by the Vasundhara Raje gover nment in Rajasthan.

The servers and cleaners in canteens serving free food face similiar discrimination though they get some benefits.While 50 regular employees earn around Rs 25,000 a month, the rest of the 600 workers on contract do the same work for less than one-third the amount.

And the unkindest cut of all is that while regular employees can have free darshan of the Lord, contract employees have to pay for it.

The Tirumala Tirupati Devasthanams (TTD) Trust consisting of a chairman and 14 members, appointed by the Andhra Pradesh government along with a full secretariat headed by an IAS officer, are responsible for the management of the temple. The wealth of the temple is continuously augmented by generous donations. Even the hair devotees' sacrifice which is sold to wig-makers, brings in a revenue of at least Rs 200 crore a year.

Should not the management and the state government ensure that the army of workers who make the Tirupati experience unique be treated with respect and dignity?

The writer is member , politbureau CPM and former member Rajya Sabha

Gold deposits

2014

Balaji temple deposits 1,800kg gold offerings with SBI

PTI | Aug 2, 2014

TIRUPATI: A whopping 1,800kg of gold offerings made by devotees of Lord Venkateswara at the famous hill shrine at Tirumala was in Aug 2014 deposited by the Tirumala Tirupati Devasthanams (TTD)with the State Bank of India, taking the total deposits made by it so far with various banks to more than 5,000kg.

This was the largest single deposit of gold made with the bank in the entire country.

The Tirumala Tirupati Devasthanams (TTD) manages the cash-rich temple

The gold offered by devotees in the hill temple hundi was deposited under SBI Gold Scheme for a period of five years at the rate of interest of one per cent, which effectively would mean addition of 12kg of gold per year.

This was the first deposit of the precious metal by TTD in two years because the banks had stopped accepting gold due to restrictions imposed by the RBI. After negotiating with various banks, SBI was the first to come forward to accept the gold deposits at one per cent interest rate per annum and TTD welcomed it.

The deposited gold is taken to government mint at Mumbai by SBI by incurring transportation charges, transit insurance, melting and refining charges and pure gold of 0.995 purity is taken as gold deposit.

The interest on gold deposit was likely to fetch TTD around 12 kg of pure gold every year, netting a total of around 60kgs in the five year period, temple sources said.

Since 2010, on maturity of gold deposits, TTD has been converting the interest earned also into gold which would again be kept as deposits.

In addition to the Aug 2014 deposit, TTD had around 4,335kg of pure gold under gold deposits with the SBI, Corporation Bank and Indian Overseas Bank.

These gold deposits earn an interest of 70kg of pure gold approximately every year to the TTD coffers.

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