The District Magistrate or the Collector is the chief executive of a district. He is responsible for running the administration of the district smoothly and properly. In fact, the district is the principal administration in India. The activities of the district administration practically covers a wide range and touches almost at every level the loves and activities of the people. The main task of the district administration is as such to implement programs with the active co-operation and support of the people of the district.
Thus the district administration has some special characteristics. Here the government comes into direct contact with the people and the problems that the district administration tries to solve are essentially local in their character. “The state government finds each district at its lowest level and its direct agency terminates there leaving the head of the district as its last agent and ‘man on the spot. Exceptions apart, the districts represent the maximum of the area in which they must work together. The district administration is field work as opposed to staff or secretarial duty. And at the collector level in the district all policies end and action begins.”
The District Magistrate or the Collector is the pivot in the district administration. He is the main agent for making the necessary co-ordination of the official agencies functioning within the district. As such the function and responsibilities of the District Magistrate may be broadly classified under three general heads viz., the District Magistrate as the Collector, the District Magistrate as the Magistrate of the ruler of the district and the District Magistrate as the highest administrative officer in the district.
As a Collector the District Magistrate is responsible for the collection of revenue from the district.
DUTIES
As a District Magistrate, the task of the D.M. is quite heavy. He is an executive magistrate. He is the head of all magistrates (except Additional District Magistrates) within the district. It may be noted that though a District Magistrate is an official of the Executive branch and not of the Judicial branch. However, the District magistrate may be granted judicial powers by the State Government in certain circumstances.
The District Magistrate acts as the Chief Protocol Officer of the district. He also conducts the census work, presides over the local institutions or remains the member there, looks after the supply and proper distribution of daily necessity goods, hears and takes adequate steps to redress the grievances of the local people, supervises the activities of the young government officers in the district and arrange for their training etc.
Apart from all these works the District Magistrate also is the chief development officer of the district. In such a capacity it is his duty to conduct all the development plans and projects of the district, make them successful and remove all the hindrances on its way, to put into effect the policy of democratic decentralization, to act as the chief liaison officer of the state government within the district and maintains close link with all the inhabitants of his district.
All these categories of works are the routine works of the District Magistrate. In addition to these works the District Magistrate functions as the returning officer in the elections of both the Lok Sabha and the State Legislative Assembly. He conducts all the election works in the district level, supervises them and co-ordinates them. Moreover, as he is the chief information officer it is his duty to collect all the necessary news and information and to dispatch them to the higher authority.
Thus, the position of a District Magistrate is both responsible and painstaking one. He is in fact the tortoise, as Ramsay MacDonald has put it, on whose back stood the elephant of the government of India. As the works of the government has become more and more complex and voluminous, the responsibility and burden of the District Magistrate have increased no doubt, but he has lost much of his prestige that he used to enjoy during the British period. In fact, after independence the status and dignity of the District Magistrate has decreased much and nowadays he is no longer considered as a high ranking bureaucrat, but has been reduced to the insignificant role of a public servant merely.
By: Urvika Shah, Asst. Editor at Legal Desire