City
Epaper

SC to deliver verdict in West Bengal's Dearness Allowance case today

By IANS | Updated: February 5, 2026 09:15 IST

Kolkata, Feb 5 The Supreme Court will on Thursday deliver the verdict on pleas, including the one filed ...

Open in App

Kolkata, Feb 5 The Supreme Court will on Thursday deliver the verdict on pleas, including the one filed by the West Bengal government against the Calcutta High Court 2022 order, asking the state government to pay Dearness Allowance at par with that of central government employees and also to release arrears on this count since July 2009.

The verdict will be delivered by the apex court’s Division Bench of Justice Sanjay Karol and Justice Prashant Kumar Mishra today.

The hearing in the matter was concluded at the Supreme Court in September last year. But the Division Bench had then kept the verdict on reserve. Finally, after a prolonged wait of around five months, the apex court will pronounce the verdict in the matter on Thursday.

In this case, the apex court earlier directed the state government to clear 25 per cent of the outstanding Dearness Allowance within six months. However, the state government was unable to comply with the order and instead asked for six months of additional time to comply with the same.

Based on that application, the hearings in the matter were conducted daily for three days in August last year. Again, the matter was heard in September, following which the Division Bench reserved its verdict in the matter.

The long legal battle over payment of Dearness Allowance started at the state administrative tribunal, and subsequently the matter was dragged to the Calcutta High Court.

In 2022, the Calcutta High Court ruled in favour of government employees and observed that Dearness Allowance was the right of state government employees and they were entitled to get it at par with central government employees.

However, the state government approached the Supreme Court challenging that ruling by the Calcutta High Court. The state government claimed that payment of Dearness Allowance was not mandatory and not a fundamental right of the employees, and hence, the state government was not obliged to pay it at the central rate.

The state government's counsel also argued that since the financial structure of the Center and the state was different, the rates of payment of Dearness Allowance would also be different. Therefore, the state cannot be compared with the rate at which the Centre pays DA.

Now, it is to be seen whether the Supreme Court’s final order on Monday will bring cheer for state government employees or not.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalPranay Verma appointed as the next Ambassador of India to Belgium, EU

Other SportsFIDE Candidates: R Vaishali takes sole lead at Women's event; Javokhir Sindarov tightens grip after win over Praggnanandhaa

BusinessDeakin University and Aikam (Telangana AI Innovation Hub) Sign Strategic MoU to Advance Applied AI, Skilling, Research and Innovation

TechnologyPM Modi highlights India’s highest-ever solar energy capacity addition

NationalEmpanelled hospitals may exit Ayushman scheme if payment issues remain unresolved: IMA Haryana

National Realted Stories

NationalPM Modi lauds Harivansh’s contribution as President nominates him to RS

NationalTamil Nadu polls: Christian minority representatives extend support to DMK and its alliance

NationalTelangana Governor Shukla calls on Prez Murmu; meets with PM Modi

NationalBengal polls: BJP releases manifesto with infiltration, transparent recruitment, women empowerment as top priorities

NationalPM Modi underscores homoeopathy’s role in Viksit Bharat vision