Friday 15 July 2011

Noting Secretariat

Functional English, Forms of Communication, Noting, Drafting, official letters
NOTING SECRETARIAT

NOTING

1.         Introduction.
2.         Definition of a note.
3.         When note is required.
4.         When note is not required.
5.         Requirement of a note.
6.         Objective of a note.
7.         Advantages of noting.
8.         Structure of a note:
            a)         First Part
            b)         Second Part
            c)         Third Part
9.         Good noting.
10.       Bad noting.
11.       Five - Ps Formula.
12.       Instructions contained in the Secretariat             Instructions   regarding  noting.
13.       Checks and counter checks.
14.       Types of cases.
           
INTRODUCTION


            Note is initiated on the note portion of the file to settle a matter while remaining in the framework of Rules and Regulations. A note is written by the Section Officer on file  describing the case which is under consideration. Two or three alternatives are normally proposed to settle the issue. In other words, a note is a statement of facts describing the issue under consideration, suggesting course of action to reach a decision.
                       
DEFINITION
           
            A note means an officer's views in writing on a file within a prescribed procedural framework to facilitate the high ups to decide the case under consideration.

WHEN NOTING IS REQUIRED

            Whenever a condition  arises  that  a matter  is  to be  decided by Senior Officer, a note is recorded in file.  It is always prepared within certain procedural framework such as:

            i)          It should clearly state the point under consideration.

            ii)         Brief background of the case may also be given in order to highlight                       the facts of the case.

iii)        Mis-statement of facts, if any, should also be pointed out while  writing a note.
iv)        The statutory instructions should be adopted while dealing with a case, such as consultation with the other Ministries/ Divisions as indicated in the Rules of Business.

v)         After a brief description of the facts of the case, the Rules/ Regulations that are applicable in the case under consideration are mentioned.  A copy of the relevant Rules is often placed in the correspondence portion.

            vi)        Relevant precedents may also be quoted, if available

vii)       In the final portion of a note, the points for decisions are highlighted again and course of action is suggested. In this regard you may propose a few alternates and suggest the best course of action.

WHEN NOTING IS NOT REQUIRED

            No noting is required when the officer himself is competent to dispose of a   matter under certain clear cut instructions, orders or delegated powers.

            Similarly when a case is already decided by a senior officer and he has asked for a draft reply, the noting is not required unless there is any point which has been escaped from the notice of the senior officer.

REQUIREMENT OF A NOTE
1.            All notes are written on the note sheet and no note should be recorded on the receipt itself.
2.            If a higher officer has given any remarks on the receipt, these should be copied out on the note sheet before subsequent notes are recorded.
3.         The officer recording the note should affix his signature on the right side of the note sheet where the note ends. His/ her name, designation and date should also be typed or rubber stamped below his / her signature. 

OBJECTIVE OF A NOTE

            A note is written to assist the competent authority to decide a matter easily.   It helps the seniors to study the whole picture of a case as portrayed by the junior officers. The decision of the matter is the end point of a note. A well written note leads to correct decision and a badly composed note may lead to confusion, wastage of time and ultimately to a bad or wrong decision.

ADVANTAGES OF NOTING

a.    It presents the various aspects of a matter in a clear perspective and bring out pros and cons of the point under consideration.
b.    It put down the views of the writer in black and white and records the precise reason for adopting a particular course of action considered to be the best out of all possible courses.
c.    A note is a record of discussion leading to a particular decision. It can be used as precedent for future references.
d.    Recorded notes help in understanding reasons for a particular decision, and in finding out, at what level the decision was taken.
e.    Responsibility for a particular decision can be fixed on the bases of recorded note.
f.     Note indicates what steps were taken and what authorities were consulted before taking final decision.
g.    Note  enables  people who come afterwards to pick up the tasks where others left.
h.    A note is a historical record and source of information for the coming officials.
STRUCTURE OF A NOTE

A note has three main parts:

  1. First Part:    It gives the brief introduction of the case under consideration.
  2. Second Part:   Main points. Mis-statement of facts if any. Relevant rules, policy of govt. precedents if any.
  3. Third Part:   Third part is the conclusion. It may be in the form of a proposal or recommendation or suggestion.

QUALITIES OF GOOD NOTING

  1. Paragraphs of a note should be numbered continuously from the beginning onwards.
  2. It should be temperate, objective and free from personal remarks.
  3. It should embody all the relevant material about a case concisely, but should not repeat facts, arguments, words and phrases.
  4. There should be sequence in narration. The points which should be stated in the           beginning must be so stated and         those which should appear in the end, must come at the end. A disjoined statement of facts will confuse the reader.
  5. The expression should be clear, precise and simple.
  6.  It should be properly documented and referenced.
  7. All previous papers, precedents, rules and regulations orders, etc. which are relied upon in a             note, should, as far as possible, be put up with it, and referenced.
           
BAD NOTING

  1. Reproduction of PUC or FR should be avoided. The case under consideration should be explained briefly in your own        words.
  2. Un-necessary details and information contribute to bad noting.
  3. Incorrect statement and unauthenticated facts lead to wrong decision and therefore adds to bad noting.
  4. Personal biases and prejudices makes a note bad.
  5. Use of flowery language, long sentence and foreign words are considered bad noting.
  6. A wrong decision may be the result of bad noting, therefore,             an extra care is required while noting.
FIVE - Ps FORMULA
P - I     =          PUC
P - II    =          PREVIOUS PAPERS
P - III   =          PROCEDURE
P - IV  =          PRECEDENT
P - V   =          PROPOSAL 

INSTRUCTIONS CONTAINED IN THE SECRETARIAT INSTRUCTIONS REGARDING NOTING

  1. As a rule, not more than two officers (excluding the Secretary) shall note upon a case before its final disposal, except where more than one section may have to be consulted.
  2. When the higher officer agrees with the note or the recommendations, he may merely append his signature.
  3. In cases which can be disposed of directly by an officer, no elaborate note need to be recorded.
  4. Where only perusal of PUC is sufficient to enable a higher officer to take a decision, there shall be no noting             beyond a brief suggestion for action.
4A.
5A.      The reproduction in a note of verbatim extracts from the paper under consideration or its paraphrasing shall as a rule be avoided. It shall be presumed that the paper under consideration will be read by the officer to whom it is submitted.
                        In complicated or protracted cases, particularly those involving references to other Divisions, the Section Officer may prepare and place in a separate cover a duly referenced summary of the case (in triplicate) which shall be kept up-to-date by incorporating important decisions.  The summary shall be signed by the officer who prepares it.  The facts of the case shall not then be reproduced in the notes portion of the file.  A copy of the summary may, if necessary be retained by another Division, when the case is referred to it.

            All notes shall be temperately written and shall be free from personal remarks.  If apparent errors are to be pointed out and if any opinion is to be criticised it shall be done in respectful language.  Proper decorum shall be observed in commenting upon the notes recorded by higher authorities.

            When it is desired to examine the proposal of another office without showing that office such examination, a ‘routine’ file may be opened.  This procedure should be adopted especially if the proposal is likely to be criticised severely. The routine file shall not be sent out to another office without special orders of the competent authority for treating it as a part of the regular file.

            To expedite disposal of cases and especially in emergencies, informal discussions between officers of the same Division shall be resorted to. The telephone shall be freely used, provided the subject is not secret.  Secretaries and other senior officers shall encourage their subordinate officers to bring up cases for advice, discussion or disposal.

            A draft of the communication to be issued shall as a rule, be prepared at the earliest possible stage of the case.
            All executive actions of the Government shall be expressed to be taken in the name of President.

            In order to avoid audit objections, financial sanctions shall be expressed to be made by the authority empowered to make them.

CHECKS AND COUNTER CHECKS

1.         Read the P.U.C. carefully. It will help you to understand the  procedure to              be  adopted for settling  a  matter.

2.         Know the facts of the case. Your personal interest in the case will help you          to find out any misstatement of facts or data.

3.         Review the pertinent files, relevant to the case and search out the Rules /             Regulations that are applicable in the case.

4.         The policy of the Government should also be kept in mind while writing a              note.

5.         Do not forget to mention the misstatement of facts or data if any in you       note.
6.         Review grammar, spelling and punctuation marks of your note before        signing it.

  1. Make sure that the file is properly referenced and flagged before its   submission to the higher officer.

TYPES   OF   CASES
            There are different types of cases and each has to be dealt accordingly. In the official terms there are basically three types of cases:
                       
1.         RESIDENCE

                        Those cases which are to be dealt urgently are placed in this category. The nature of urgency can be understood from the fact that files or papers are sent to an officer's residence after office hours for disposal.  However no files or papers should be sent to Ministers or officers at their residences between 11.00 P.M. to 07.00 A.M. except in extreme emergency. This restriction does not apply to Cypher Telegram which may be sent to the residence of the concerned Minister and Officers by the Duty Cypher Officer, Crypto Centre, M/O Foreign Affairs, if the urgency of the matter demands it. Before doing so, the Duty Cypher Officer will contact the addressee on telephone     to confirm that they are available at the    residence to receive such cypher telegrams.

                        The nature of residence cases varies from office to office. Each Ministry / Division has its priorities/standing instructions for such cases. These cases  are to be dealt with great care without any delay. The cases pertaining to national security, reply of assembly questions, legislative matter etc., may be included in this category.
2.         IMMEDIATE

            These are the cases which require instant attention of the officer concerned. In the Secretariat Instructions such cases are to be disposed of finally within 24 hours. Label indicating "IMMEDIATE" is attached with such files and these files may be dealt on top priority basis. In many instances such files are delivered from one office to another by  hand in order to avoid delay involved in diarising process.

3.         PRIORITY

            Priority cases are those which are to be disposed of within three days. These cases are different than the routine cases. It should be clear that use of residence and immediate labels should be made most sparingly and every case should not be declared to be immediate or priority otherwise there would be no logic behind the use of these labels.

            Receipts wrongly marked to a section should be transferred promptly to the concerned section or returned to the Central Registry. Such receipts should not be diarized in the section to which they do not relate. Every section officer should go through the fresh receipt in order to check as to whether the receipt pertains to his section or not. If he considers that some receipts are important enough to be seen by higher officer before action is initiated, he should submit it to the Deputy Secretary or bring it to him by hand.

            In each Ministry/Division there are certain receipts which are filed directly under the standing instructions without taking any action on them. For instance advance copies of applications and requests not made properly (through proper channel) are filed without taking any action. However, in order to provide justice such applications may either be discussed with the Senior Officers or with the applicant, if possible. In a few cases such receipts are referred back to the concerned quarters alongwith the covering letter of the Ministry/Division.

SPECIMEN OF  NOTE

56.                   Ministry of Law, Justice & Human Rights vide FR have requested for posting of Mr. Muhammad Naeem, Section Officer, Establishment Division in Provincial Program Management Unit’s of Punjab on deputation basis for a period of three years.

57.                   It is pointed here that Ministry of Law, Justice & Human Rights have earlier requested for nomination of OMG officers for posting in Provincial Program Management Unit’s of Punjab, NWFP and Balochistan under Access to Justice Program on deputation basis.

58.                   The nomination of Mr. Muhammad Naeem, Section Officer, Establishment Division was forwarded to Ministry of Law, Justice & Human Rights for posting in PPMU, Punjab on deputation basis.

59.                   It is submitted here that Mr. Muhammad Naeem was appointed as Section Officer on the basis of Section Officers Promotional Examination 1999. The officer remained posted in the Cabinet Division, Finance Division and Establishment Division. He has not availed any posting/appointment on deputation during his entire service. He is also desirous for posting in Lahore due to some domestic problems.

60.                   It is stated here that the officer can be posted on deputation basis on standard terms and conditions of deputation contained in Establishment Division’s OM No. 1/13/87-R-I, dated 3-12-1990.

61.                   It is, proposed that as desired by Ministry of Law, Justice & Human Rights we may place the services of Mr. Muhammad Naeem, Section Officer, Establishment Division at their disposal further posting in PPMU Punjab on deputation basis.

62.                   Submitted for approval of JS(A) please.

                                              

Tags: Functional English, Forms of Communication, Noting, Drafting, Official letters, Noting & Drafting, Noting Secretariat, Drafting Secretariat, Official Language uses in government offices, Noting and Drafting proceedure

 

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