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Revenue dept staff to boycott SIR work in TN citing overload

Some BLOs such as Anganwadi workers and staff involved in the noon meal scheme, municipal corporation workers, find it difficult to complete the task on time as they have not been given any training on the digital aspects of the exercise, officials said

Published on: Nov 18, 2025 06:46 AM IST
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Chennai: Revenue staff across Tamil Nadu will boycott all work related to the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls from November 18 because of excessive workload, the Federation of Revenue Associations (FERA) has announced.

Chennai: Tamil Nadu Congress Committee President K. Selvaperunthagai, DMK MPs Thamizhachi Thangapandian, Dr. Kanimozhi NVN Somu, and other leaders take part in a protest against the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls, in Chennai earlier. (PTI PHOTO)
Chennai: Tamil Nadu Congress Committee President K. Selvaperunthagai, DMK MPs Thamizhachi Thangapandian, Dr. Kanimozhi NVN Somu, and other leaders take part in a protest against the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls, in Chennai earlier. (PTI PHOTO)

This comes amid several parties including the ruling DMK coalition in Tamil Nadu opposing SIR being conducted just months before the 2026 assembly elections. The state-wide boycott demands training for all officials, appointment of additional Booth Level Officers, citing severe workload, insufficient training, poor planning, and lack of manpower.

A Booth Level Officer (BLO) is expected to distribute about 1,200 Enumeration Forms (EFs) and collect them within two days, though the last date for submitting the EFs is December 4 so it can be digitised, said an office bearer of FERA who did not wish to be named.

Some BLOs such as Anganwadi workers and staff involved in the noon meal scheme, municipal corporation workers, find it difficult to complete the task on time as they have not been given any training on the digital aspects of the exercise, he added. “It is extremely difficult to complete such a huge exercise within a short period of time which we are doing besides our everyday workload and responsibilities,” said a BLO from an assembly constituency in Chennai who did not wish to be named.

As of November 17 in Tamil Nadu 94.31% EFs have been distributed of which 9.62% have been digitised, the Election Commission of India (ECI) said in its bulletin. The ongoing SIR concludes on December 4 and involves distributing and collecting forms, uploading them online, and holding meetings.

On Monday, some of the staff protested in front of taluk and district headquarters seeking the intervention of the ECI and the state election body. “Review meetings are being held until midnight and we demanded that this should be stopped,” the FERA member said.

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Divya Chandrababu

Divya Chandrababu is an award-winning political and human rights journalist based in Chennai, India. Divya is presently Assistant Editor of the Hindustan Times where she covers Tamil Nadu & Puducherry. She started her career as a broadcast journalist at NDTV-Hindu where she anchored and wrote prime time news bulletins. Later, she covered politics, development, mental health, child and disability rights for The Times of India. Divya has been a journalism fellow for several programs including the Asia Journalism Fellowship at Singapore and the KAS Media Asia- The Caravan for narrative journalism. Divya has a master's in politics and international studies from the University of Warwick, UK. As an independent journalist Divya has written for Indian and foreign publications on domestic and international affairs.

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