Nagpur: Thirty years Ashish Mawle worked hard – first as a coarse worker and then a truck driver – for 13 years before he became one of the 61 candidates who qualified to get jobs in the government with various departments (Anukampa) in various departments from Zilla Parishad (ZP).
After being chosen as a junior assistant officer in Pancide Samiti, Ramtek, said Mawle, “My mother used to do housework at home people to make a living.
The first thing I did was call him and ask him to stop working somewhere else.” Voice Mawle choked on emotion when she expressed her feelings after a lot of struggle and a long time finally paved the way for the coveted government work.
He got a job after his father’s death on duty at ZP.
Mawle submitted a request to get a job at his father’s place in 2008, after which he began making the ZP offices to fulfill various formalities and encourage the documents, trying to make pieces as soon as possible.
With younger sisters and mothers to be guarded, Mawle is used to work hard for livelihoods, working as a driver or worker when not running the pillar to post jobs.
“I became emotional after getting a job and so did my mother,” Mawle said, who had cleaned up the SSC but could not continue when his father’s death forced him to assume family responsibilities.
CEO of ZP Yogesh Kumbhejkar, which has so far helped 129 candidates to get government work about the reasons for compassion, the word transparency was maintained in all processes and norms followed for the manufacture of placement.
He was assisted by a team under the supervision of the Deputy CEO of Anil Kites.
“We show every candidate for opportunity placement available and how they are being given a job, following the criteria,” Kumbhejkar said.
Like Mawle, the 29-year-old Bhagyashree Tengre is another candidate who gets a job with the reason for affection after waiting for 10 years.
The oldest power of three sisters, Tengre was chosen as junior assistant officer at the Rural Development Authority of the ZP district.
He also got a job at his deceased father’s place.
Tengre, who had to stop the post HSC study following his father’s death to support his family of three sisters and their mothers, was contemplating continuing his education.
“I want to buy a house for us first,” said Tengre, who works as a marketing executive and runs 10-15 km per day to go from the store to take orders.
Vilas Sahare 41-year-old, who received the work of Junior’s assistant officer in Kuhi Pancayat Samiti, has also been waiting for its turn because he has submitted his request in 2008.
Sauhare, who is a farm laborer, will not join the government’s duty immediately.