Provincial Police Service

Provincial Police Service
Prāntīya Pulisa Sevā
Service overview
Also known asUttar Pradesh Police Service
Founded1858; 166 years ago (1858)
StateUttar Pradesh
Staff collegeDr. Bhim Rao Ambedkar Police Academy, Moradabad, Uttar Pradesh
Cadre controlling authorityDepartment of Home and Confidential, Government of Uttar Pradesh
Minister responsibleYogi Adityanath, Chief Minister of Uttar Pradesh and Minister of Home and Confidential
Legal personalityGovernmental: civil service
Current cadre strength1310 members (807 officers directly recruited by the Uttar Pradesh Public Service Commission and 503 officers promoted from the rank of inspector)[1]
SelectionState Civil Services Examination
AssociationUttar Pradesh PPS Association
Head of the State Civil Services
Chief SecretaryDr. Anup Chandra Pandey, IAS[2][3][4]
Additional Chief Secretary (Home)Awanish Awasthi, IAS
Director General of Uttar Pradesh PoliceMukul Goyal, IPS

Provincial Police Service (IAST: Prāntīya Pulisa Sevā), often abbreviated to as PPS, is the state civil service for policing of Uttar Pradesh Police comprising Group A and Group B posts. It is also the feeder service for Indian Police Service in the state.[5]

PPS officers hold various posts at the circle, district, range, zonal and state levels to maintain order, enforce the law and to prevent and detect crime. The Department of Home and Confidential of the Government of Uttar Pradesh is the cadre controlling authority of the service. Along with the Provincial Civil Service (PCS) and the Provincial Forest Service (PFS), the PPS is one of the three feeder services to its respective All India Services.

Responsibilities of a PPS officer

The typical functions performed by a PPS officer are:

  • To fulfil duties based on border responsibilities, in the areas of maintenance of public peace and order, crime prevention, investigation, and detection, collection of intelligence, VIP security, counter-terrorism, border policing, railway policing, tackling smuggling, drug trafficking, economic offences, corruption in public life, disaster management, enforcement of socio-economic legislation, bio-diversity and protection of environmental laws etc.
  • Leading and commanding the State Vigilance Establishment, Crime Branch-Criminal Investigation Department (CB-CID), State Intelligence Bureau etc under the supervision of officers senior to them.
  • Leading and commanding the UP-PAC, State Special Task Force (UP-STF) etc. under the supervision of police officers senior to them.
  • To interact and coordinate closely with the members of other state civil services in the matters regarding policing.
  • To lead and command the force with courage, uprightness, dedication and a strong sense of service to the people.
  • Endeavour to inculcate in the police forces under their command such values and norms as would help them serve the people better.
  • Inculcate integrity of the highest order, sensitivity to aspirations of people in a fast-changing social and economic milieu, respect for human rights, the broad liberal perspective of law and justice and high standard of professionalism.

Career progression

Post the completion of his or her training, a PPS officer, in the rank of deputy superintendent of police (Dy. SP), generally serves at the police circle level as circle officer. Generally, a police circle consists of three to five police stations. After that, they get promoted to the rank of Additional Superintendent of Police (SP). Districts with a senior superintendent of police (SSP) as the police chief generally have four Addl. SPs under the SSP, each responsible for city, rural areas, crime and traffic designated as 'SP (City)', 'SP (Rural Areas)', 'SP (Crime)' and 'SP (Traffic)'. In metropolitan cities in UP, jurisdictional SPs like SP City or SP Rural Areas are further divided into various designations such as 'SP (North)', 'SP (South)', 'SP (East)', 'SP (West)', SP (Ganga Par), SP (Yamuna Par), 'SP (Trans Gomti)' etc. Whereas, districts with a superintendent of police (SP) as the police chief usually have one and rarely two SPs under them which generally have a lower grade pay than the SP who is the head of the district.

Recently, Lucknow City, Gautam Budh Nagar (Noida), Kanpur Nagar and Varanasi became police commissionerates. PPS officers at DSP rank are posted as ACP (Assistant Commissioner of Police) and at SP rank are posted as ADCP (Additional Deputy Commissioner of Police).

At the zonal level, a PPS officer is posted as the staff officer of the concerned additional director general of police heading the zone which is of Addl. SP rank. Before 2017, they were posted as staff officer to IG police zone but now ADG ranked officers are posted in zones. PPS officers of the rank of SP are also posted as sector officers in the Crime Branch-Criminal Investigation Department. PPS officers are also attached to DGP Headquarters as Addl. SP and Dy. SP. They are also posted in State Police Recruitment and Promotion Boards, Anti Terrorist Squad, Special Task Force, Special Investigation Team, State Vigilance Establishment, Economic Offences Wing HQ etc.[5]

PPS officers also serve as second-in-command and deputy commandants (at SP rank) and assistant commandants (at Dy. SP rank) in the Uttar Pradesh Provincial Armed Constabulary, Uttar Pradesh's state armed police force. On deputation, a PPS officer can be sent to one of the various constitutional bodies, agencies and state public sector enterprises, such as the Uttar Pradesh Power Corporation Limited, electricity distribution boards, Uttar Pradesh Human Rights Commission, Uttar Pradesh Disaster Response Force etc. in capacity of SP and Dy. SP. Some PPS officers have also go to work for central government agencies such as the Enforcement Directorate and the National Investigation Agency.[5]

After completion of two decades of service, PPS officers directly recruited by Uttar Pradesh Public Service Commission (UPPSC) get promoted to the Indian Police Service, after confirmation by the Ministry of Home Affairs of Government of India and the Union Public Service Commission. One-third of the total IPS strength in Uttar Pradesh is reserved for PPS officers (SPS quota).[6]

Salary structure

Most of the directly recruited PPS officers get promoted to the IPS after getting grade pay of level 13 or 13A. Those who don't get promotion to IPS get classified as 'superseded' and get the grade pay of level 14.[7]

The salary structure of the Provincial Police Service
Insignia Grade/level on pay matrix Base salary (per month) Sanctioned Strength Some key positions Years of service
Senior administrative grade (Above Super time scale) (pay level 14) ₹144200–218200 10 Additional Superintendent of Police, Superintendent of Police (City, Rural Area, Crime, Traffic), Additional Deputy Commissioner of Police, Deputy Commandant PAC etc. 22nd year
Super time scale (pay level 13A) ₹131100–216600 27 Additional Superintendent of Police, Superintendent of Police (City, Rural Area, Crime, Traffic), Additional Deputy Commissioner of Police, Deputy Commandant PAC etc. 21st year
Selection grade (pay level 13) ₹118500–214100 67 Additional Superintendent of Police, Superintendent of Police (City, Rural Area, Crime, Traffic), Additional Deputy Commissioner of Police, Deputy Commandant PAC etc. 16th year
Junior administrative grade (pay level 12) ₹78800–191500 182 Additional Superintendent of Police, Superintendent of Police (City, Rural Area, Crime, Traffic), Additional Deputy Commissioner of Police, Deputy Commandant PAC etc. 12th year
Senior time scale (pay level 11) ₹67700–160000 250 Deputy Superintendent of Police, Circle Officer, Assistant Commissioner of Police, Assistant Commandant PAC etc 6th year
Junior time scale (pay level 10) ₹56100–132000 756 Deputy Superintendent of Police, Circle Officer, Assistant Commissioner of Police, Assistant Commandant PAC etc Initial year

Major concerns and reforms

Promotion to IPS

According to the Indian Police Service (Appointment by Promotion) Regulations, 1955, PPS officers are eligible for promotion to IPS after completion of eight years of service.[8] But in reality, officers are generally promoted to the IPS after two and half decades in service. Unlike their counterparts in PCS who get promoted to IAS almost ten years early.[9]

Demand for SP level postings while in PPS

PPS Association has repeatedly demanded to post its officers in Pay Level 13A and 14 grade at Superintendent of Police and equivalent rank instead of Additional Superintendent of Police and equivalent rank. Such postings are given to state police service officers in states like Punjab, Jammu and Kashmir, Odisha etc.

Political influence

Directly recruited IPS officers often complain that promotee PPS officers are given preference in field postings due to their close proximity to politicians which they form in two decades of their service. Since the state government was often ruled by regional parties, many politicians allegedly fix 'their men' on important inspector general and deputy inspector general rank positions. Currently 32 out of 75 district SSPs and SPs are promotee IPS officers, including the SSP of Kanpur Nagar, which has the largest district police force in the state. In addition six deputy inspectors general heading range headquarters are promotee IPS officers.

See also

References

  1. ^ "2017 Total Cadre strength of PPS as in December 2017" (PDF). Department of Home and Confidential, Government of Uttar Pradesh. Retrieved 3 October 2018.
  2. ^ "Anoop [sic] Chandra Pandey takes charge as chief secretary". Hindustan Times. HT correspondent. Lucknow. 1 July 2018. ISSN 0972-0243. OCLC 231696742. Retrieved 31 October 2018 – via PressReader.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  3. ^ "Anup Chandra Pandey took over as the new Chief Secretary of UP". The Pioneer. Lucknow: Chandan Mitra. Pioneer News Service. 1 July 2018. Retrieved 31 October 2018.
  4. ^ "Anup Chandra Pandey takes charge as new Chief Secretary of UP". United News of India. Lucknow. United News of India. 30 June 2018. Retrieved 31 October 2018.
  5. ^ a b c "61 PPS officers promoted to IPS". WebIndia123. Retrieved 3 October 2018.
  6. ^ "Service Profile for the Indian Police Service" (PDF). Ministry of Home Affairs, Government of India. Retrieved 3 October 2018.
  7. ^ "Uttar Pradesh Police Service Rules, 2016" (PDF). Department of Home and Confidential. Government of Uttar Pradesh. 18 October 2016. Retrieved 1 December 2023.
  8. ^ "IPS (APPOINTMENT BY PROMOTION) REGULATIONS, 1955" (PDF). Ministry of Home Affairs. Retrieved 19 January 2018.
  9. ^ https://www.bhaskar.com/amp/local/uttar-pradesh/lucknow/news/the-wait-for-promotion-is-so-long-that-they-retire-now-boys-are-choosing-pcs-instead-of-pps-131711501.html

External links

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