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Students Receiving Over ₹18,000 In Aid To Be Barred From Subhadra Scheme Benefits

Bhubaneswar, Oct 19: The Odisha government has issued a fresh directive concerning eligibility under the Subhadra Scheme, stating that female students receiving more than ₹18,000 annually in scholarships or financial assistance from any central or state government scheme will be declared ineligible for Subhadra benefits.

The Department of Women and Child Welfare Development of Odisha has sought detailed reports from the Higher Education Department and the ST & SC Development, Minorities & Backward Classes Welfare Department, asking for data on students who received over ₹18,000 in aid during the 2023–24 and 2024–25 financial years. The move follows multiple complaints regarding overlapping benefits and aims to streamline the scheme’s implementation.

As per the scheme’s guidelines, eligible beneficiaries must be between 21 and 60 years of age and should not be availing more than ₹18,000 annually from any other government initiative. The department clarified that even though scholarships are meant for educational purposes, they will be considered financial assistance when assessing eligibility.

Following the first state-level monitoring and review committee meeting on Subhadra, the department further announced that beneficiaries turning 60 years will be eligible to apply for old-age pensions under schemes like the Madhu Babu Pension Yojana (MBPY) and the National Social Assistance Programme (NSAP). A formal communication has been sent to include former Subhadra beneficiaries under these pension schemes.

About Editor in chief

Ashok Palit has completed his graduation from Upendranath College Soro, Balasore and post graduation from Utkal University in Odia Language and literture.. He has also carved out a niche for himself as a scribe of eminence after joining the profession in 1988. He is also an independent media production professional. He brings loads of experience to Advanced Media, Ashok Palit as a cineaste has been active in film criticism for over three decades. As a film society activist, he soared to eminence for his profound commitment to the art film appreciation and aesthetics of cinema. His mode of discourse is often erudite but always lucid and comprehensible marked by a perfect acumen so rare in the field. A film aesthete with an immense fond of critical sensibilities, he wrote about growth and development of odia cinema in New Indian Express, The Times of India, The Hindustan Times, The Asian Age and Screen. He has been working as an Editor for Cine Samaya from 2002-2004.. He had made solid contribution on cinema in many odia Dailies and weekly such as Samaj, Prajatantra, Dharatri, Samaya, Satabadi, and weekly Samaya.
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