The deaths of Booth Level Officers during the Special Intensive Revision raise concerns about workload and capacity

The Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls—conducted ahead of major state elections—plays a crucial role in ensuring clean, accurate, and inclusive voter lists. However, the recent death by suicide of a Booth Level Officer (BLO) in West Bengal, reportedly due to extreme work pressure during the SIR process, has triggered serious concerns regarding administrative stress, resource capacity, and the working conditions of frontline election staff.
According to reports, the BLO had cited overwhelming workload and constant pressure to meet deadlines during SIR as reasons for mental distress. This tragedy has amplified ongoing debates about the demanding nature of electoral tasks, particularly in states where political competition is high and voter list integrity is heavily scrutinised.

SIR requires massive mobilisation of field staff, generating substantial administrative pressure—especially in regions with large populations and high migration.
Much of SIR today is digitised through apps and online verification tools. While this enhances transparency, it also increases technical workload, longer working hours, and back-to-back reporting cycles, creating intense stress for BLOs.
India’s electoral machinery depends heavily on schoolteachers, clerks, and local government workers drafted temporarily for election duties. This raises fundamental questions:
The incident renews focus on the well-being of election workers, who often face:
There is a growing call for formal mental-health support, insurance coverage, and regulated work hours during revision cycles.
SIR is essential for preventing voter fraud and ensuring democratic credibility. However, the tragedy forces a reconsideration of whether electoral integrity should come at the cost of overburdened officers, many of whom lack training, digital skills, or logistical support.
The death of a BLO during the SIR exercise is a stark reminder that electoral preparedness must prioritise not only procedural accuracy but also the well-being of the people who implement the process. Strengthening administrative capacity, improving workload management, and embedding welfare safeguards will be essential to sustain India’s reputation for conducting electoral exercises at an unparalleled scale and complexity.

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