i) The
APAR is an important document. It provides the basic and vital inputs for
assessing the performance of an
officer and for his/her further advancement in his/her career. The officer
reported upon, the Reporting Authority, the Reviewing Authority and the
Accepting Authority should, therefore, undertake the duty of filling out the
form with a high sense of responsibility. The columns in the APAR should be
filled with due care and attention and after devoting adequate time. Also
please refer DoPT O.M. No.21011/1/2005-Estt(A)(Pt.II) dt. 23.07.2009 and
14.05.2009. For further details, DoPT
website at www.performance.gov.in can be viewed.
ii) (a) Please also refer the Website of DoPT and
the instructions contained in on preparation and maintenance of APAR for
Central Civil Services. Section
2.11 and 5.2, 5.3 wherein the importance of writing/reviewing of the APAR
within time frame which is also herewith attached. The right to write the APAR
will lapse after that time frame.
(b) If
any APAR, duly completed in all respects, of the previous financial year is not
received in the concerned Custodian Office upto 31st December of the next
financial year or received thereafter, that APAR will not be kept in the APAR
Dossier of the concerned officer and the period of such missing APARs will be
treated as NO APAR YEAR for that officer and in this regard necessary Certificate will be recorded by the
concerned Custodian Office of APAR after 31st December of the next financial
year without waiting the receipt of APAR of the previous financial year and
that Certificate will be kept in the APAR Dossier of the
concerned officer.
iii) Performance appraisal through
APAR should be used as a tool for human resource development.Reporting Officer should realise that the
objective is to develop an officer so that he/she realizes his/her true
potential. It is not meant to be a fault-finding process but the developmental
one. TheReporting Officer and the
Reviewing Officer should not shy away from reporting shortcomings in
performance, attitudes or overall personality of the officer reported upon.
iv) Pen Picture of the official in about 70 words
should include any special characteristics or any exceptional merits or
capability justify his/her selection for special assignments or out of turn
promotion. It may include comments on the overall qualities of the officer
including areas of strengths and lesser strength or weaknesses.
v) Numerical grading are to be awarded by reporting
and reviewing authorities for the quality of work output, personal attributes
and functional competence of the officer reported upon. These should be on a
scale of 1-10, where I refers to the lowest grade and 10 to the highest. The
guidelines given in Annexure-I shall be kept in mind while awarding numerical
gradings. It is expected that any grading of 1 or 2 (against work output or
attributes or overall grade) would be adequately justified in the pen-picture
by way of specific failures and similarly, any grade of 9 or 10 would be
justified with respect to specific accomplishments. Grades of 1-2 or 9-10 are
expected to be rare occurrences and hence the need to justify them. In awarding
a numerical grade the reporting and reviewing authorities should rate the
official against a larger population of his/her peers that may be currently
working under them.
vi) APARs graded between 8 and 10 will be rated as
‘outstanding’ and will be given a score of 9 for the purpose of calculating average scores for
empanelment/ promotion.
vii) APARs graded between 6 and short of 8 will be
rated as ‘very good’ and will be given a score of 7.
viii) APARs graded between 4 and 6 short of 6 will be
rated as ‘good’ and given a score of 5.
ix) APARs graded below 4 will be given a score of
zero.
x) All attributes under Section 3.1, 3.2, 3.3 carry
equal weightage in their respective sections.Cutting and over writing to be
avoided, if unavoidable to be initiated.
xi) In case of any aptitude not applicable in 3.1,
3.2, 3.3, a remarks to this effect may be given and no numbering be assessed.
xii) Reporting Officer shall prior to the commencement of the reporting
year i.e. April, fix assignments and tasks with targets and objectives for the
reported officer in consultation with each of the officers with respect to whom
he is required to report upon. Performance
appraisal should be
a joint exercise between the officer reported upon and the Reporting Officer.
xiii) Although performance
appraisal is a
year-end exercise, in order that it may be a tool for human resource
development, the Reporting
Officer and the
officer reported upon should meet during the course of the year at regular
intervals to review the performance and take necessary corrective steps, as
warranted.
xiv) Some posts of the same rank may be more exerting
than others. The degree of stress and strain in any post may also vary from
time to time. These facts should be borne in mind during appraisal and should
be commented upon appropriately.
xv) From the financial year 2012-2013, Annual
Medical Examination in the prescribed proforma as given in Annexure-III should
be got conducted from the approved Medical Centres/Hospitals as given in
Annexure-II by Group ‘A’ officers, who have attained the age of 40 years and
above, and the summary report of medical examination in the prescribed proforma
as given in Annexure-III should be attached with the APAR Form. The cost of the
medical examination will be got reimbursed by the officer from his concerned
office as per CGHS Rules and the latest circulars in this
regard.
xvi) NOTE
: The
following procedure should be followed in filling up the column relating to
Integrity :
1. If the Official’s integrity is beyond doubt, it may be so stated.
2. If there is any doubt or suspicion, the column should be left
blank and action taken as under :
a) A
separate secret note should be recorded and followed up. A copy of the note
should also be sent together with the Performance Assessment Report to the next
superior officer who will ensure that the follow up action is taken
expeditiously. Where it is not possible either to certify the integrity or to
record the secret note, the Reporting
Officer should
state either that he had not watched the officer’s work for sufficient time to
form a definite judgment or that he has heard nothing against the officer, as
the case may be.
b) If, as
a result of the follow up action, the doubt or suspicions are cleared, the
officer’s integrity should be certified and an entry made accordingly in the
Performance Assessment Report.
c) If the
doubts or suspicions are confirmed the fact should also be recorded and duly
communicated to the officer concerned.
d) If as
a result of the follow up action, the doubts or suspicions are neither cleared
nor confirmed, the officer’s conduct should be watched for a further period and
thereafter action taken as indicated at (b) and (c) above.
xvii) Where a Reporting
officer/Reviewing officer retires, he may be allowed to give the report on his
subordinates within one month of retirement.
xviii) Atleast 3 months experience of Supervising the
work and conduct of Govt. servant reported upon should be there before
assessing APAR.
xix) If the Reporting/Review officer is under
suspension when the annual APAR has become due to be written/reviewed, it may
be written/reviewed within 2 months from the date of his having placed on
suspension or one month from the date on which the report was due, whichever is
later.
xx) Where an officer has taken Earned Leave for a
period of more than 15 days, the total period spent on leave can be deducted
from the total period spent on any post, for the purposes of computing the
period of 3 months which is relevant for writing of entries in the APAR. Leave
taken for short term duration need not be treated as relevant for the purpose.
xxi)After
the expiry of the first week of the time-schedule (15th April), if the self
appraisal is not received by that time, Reporting Officer should take it upon
himself to remind the officer to be reported upon in writing, asking him to
submit his self-appraisal. If no self-appraisal is received by the stipulated
date, the reporting officer can obtain another blank APAR form and proceed to
write the report on the basis of his experience of the work and conduct of the
officer reported upon. While doing so, he can also point out the failure of the
officer reported upon to submit his self-appraisal within the stipulated time.
xxii) If the APAR is not initiated by the Reporting
Officer for any reason beyond 30th June of the year in which financial year
ended, he shall forfeit his right to enter any remarks in the APAR of the
officer reported upon and he shall submit all APAR held by him for reporting to
the reviewing officer on the next working day.
xxiii) The controlling officer has been directed to
call for explanation of the concerned officers for not having perform the
public duty of not writing the APAR within due date and his absence of
justification direct that a written warning for delay in completing the APAR be
placed in the APAR folder of the defaulting officer concerned.
xxiv) The full APAR including the overall grades and
assessment of integrity shall be communicated to the concerned officer after
the report is complete with the remarks of the reviewing officer and the
accepting authority, wherever such a system is in vogue.
xxv) The
assessment in Part-IV is descriptive only and no grading is to be provided.
TIME SCHEDULE FOR PREPARATION/COMPLETION OF APAR
(Reporting year- Financial year)
S.No.
|
Activity
|
Date by which to be completed
|
1
|
Distribution of blank APAR forms to
allconcerned (i.e., to officer to be reported uponwhere self-appraisal has to
be given and toreporting officers where self-appraisal is not to begiven)
|
31st March.(This may be completed even aweek
earlier).
|
2.
|
Submission of self-appraisal to reporting
officer by officer to be reported upon (where applicable).
|
15th April.
|
3.
|
Submission of report by reporting officer to
reviewing officer
|
30th June
|
4.
|
Report to be completed by Reviewing Officer
and to be sent to Administration or CR Section/Cell or accepting authority,
wherever provided.
|
31st July
|
5.
|
Appraisal by accepting authority, wherever
provided
|
31st August
|
6.
|
(a) Disclosure to the officer reported upon
where there is no accepting authority
|
01st September
|
(b) Disclosure to the officer reported upon
where there is accepting authority
|
15th September
|
|
7.
|
Receipt of representation, if any, on APAR
|
15 days from the date of receipt of
communication
|
8.
|
Forwarding of representations to the
competent authority
|
|
(a) where there is no accepting authority
for APAR
|
21st September
|
|
(b) where there is accepting authority for
APAR
|
06th October
|
|
9.
|
Disposal of representation by the competent
authority
|
Within one month from the date of receipt of
representation.
|
10.
|
Communication of the decision of the
competent authority on the representation by the APAR Cell
|
15th November
|
11.
|
End of entire APAR process, after which the
APAR will be finally taken on record
|
Comments
Post a Comment