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Step 1: Getting the labour card

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What is BoCW labor card?

A BoCW labor card is an official identification card issued to construction workers who are eligible under the BoCW Act.

Why is the possession of a labor card from BoCW mandatory for construction workers?

In Karnataka, Possession of a labor card from the Building and Other Construction Workers (BoCW) is mandatory for construction workers for several key reasons:

Key factors for obtaining a labor card for construction workers: Critical and enabling factors

Benefits

Amount (Rs.)

Frequency

Applies to

Contribution by worker (Rs.)

Time specified (days)

Time taken (days)

Fee specified (Rs.)

Money spent (Rs.)

Timeline for submission

BOCW Card

-

-

BoCW Worker

-

45

60-90

50

 

After 90 days of work in B&C

  1. Employment certificate- to prove work in B&OC for 90 days in the preceding year (From one of these- employer, registered trade union, labor inspector, and gram panchayat + PDO i.e. Panchayati Development Officer). The registration form's link has been provided in the text above.
  2. Aadhaar Card (with linked mobile number)
  3. Ration card (now not mandatory, till 6 months ago was mandatory for renewal)
  4. Age proof (e.g., Voter ID or Aadhaar)
  5. Nominee and children's correct name and age details
  1. Construction worker should aged between 18-55 

What is the amount of Labour card pension in Karnataka?

The amount of pension shall not exceed a sum of Rs. 3000/- per month (Govt of Karnataka Notification No. LD 458 LET 2021 Bangalore Dated: 08-08-2022.)

Why do construction workers often fail to receive the benefits they are entitled to from various schemes?

Potential factors leading to exclusion from the benefits of schemes under BoCW at different phases

Lack of awareness-awareness and trust among workers-

  • Once application gets rejected there is no refund. So, workers are apprehensive of wasting money and go via agencies.

Lack of supporting documents-

  • Many times workers leave their necessary documents at native place when they come for work, especially migrants from UP & Bihar
  • Having a bank account with an Aadhar-linked mobile phone is a prerequisite, and many workers do not meet this requirement
  • Names, age and address don’t match in different docs

Lack of resources-

  • In
  • or
  • they

EligibilityLack conditions-of cooperation-

Policy design issues- 

On-ground implementation issues-

  • Petty labourers don’t get the seal/ sign of contractors as they work irregularly at different site
  • Physical verification of hands to figure out person is working sand and cement
  • At the time of verification, worker may switch to another worksite hence not available on previous construction site when he applies
  • Petty labourers don’t get the seal/ sign of contractors as they work irregularly at different sites
  • Another example: a person drives a vehicle supplying water on construction sites. When the labour inspector calls for verification, he says I am a driver. So, the application gets rejected.

Tech related

  • BOCW website doesn’t stay up for more than 10 minutes at a stretch- it frequently takes them 5 hours to fill one application form
  • Technical glitches like photo size and space also pose an important challenges while uploading docs
  • Some CSOs take money from applicants to apply for cards/ schemes
  • Cyber centres bribe officers to get work done
  • For all Aadhaar linkage work, OTP comes to the applicant’s phone but they refuse to cooperate because they are at work or don’t see phones for a long time. So this application process needs to be repeated multiple times as OTP has time-bound validity.
  • Workers don’t remember the login details which remain with CSOs, so trust building takes time.

Documents-

Aadhar seeding-

Registration process-

Annual Renewal-

Tech/ website related-

What measures does the CSO undertake to offer resolution to laborers regarding matters related to the BoCW labor card?

  • Certain CSOs enroll construction workers into unions, and these unions assume the comprehensive responsibility for addressing labor card issues, including renewal, corrections, and updates, such as  Sampark and Grakoos.
  • Mitr Sanketa, which primarily serves domestic workers but also offers assistance to construction workers, showcasing a broader commitment to supporting various segments of the informal sector.
  • Jansahas is an example of a CSO that underwent a qualifying test to obtain the license for Seva Sindhu, the government portal used for registering laborers, updating their Aadhar information, and applying for various schemes. This was achieved by establishing a central service unit (Forgot name actually)