888
Aleadman.
1969.
1609
Y
Dont you think the secretary is a man who clearly ought
Dr. Clarke
989
16.044
to know everything going on?
A.
•
No, I think the head of the Department; he more
especially should know.
95 Q..
16095
دادان
I cant conceive such a state of affairs myself, from a
business point of view. That is the system with regard
te fining officers and servants of the Board ?
A.
Do you mean the powers ?
96 Q.
If people are reported, complaints made ?
A.
16.096
9) R.
A.
18 ૨.
Well, the F. C. M. o. fines under the Ordinance, and it
is all recorded in the book.
Do you keep any record of complaints that are made 6,097
against servants or officers of the Board, or is a
record only kept when a man is actually punished?
Written complaints would be kept for a time, by the
head of the Department, put on one side in a drawer. Dont you think it wouldbe better that all complaints 16.098
should he regularly filed in a special file for that
purpose, even although the officer should be exonerated ?
Yes, it might be done.
A.
99 Q.
Dont
A.
Yes.
4.
you think it would be a good thing to do?
16.099
16160
PUBLIC RECORD OFFICE
Reference:-
C.O. 537
36
RECORD OFFICE, LONDON
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COPYRIGHT PHOTOGRAPH - NOT TO BE
ตา
A.
A.
Whenever an officer is censured or fined, is that
invariably entered in the misconduct book ?
I dont know about censure.
16.100
Would there not be a record that a man, if he had been
Bix times in a year complained of, would there be no
record of his being up six times ?
ነ
A man is reprimanded for oversights, and things like
that, and it is in the discretion of the P. C. M. 0.
whether he should give instructions to enter it in the
defaulters hook. We could keep a separate book for
trivial complaints.