Irms Seniority List • Original
For the uninitiated, it is a spreadsheet of names and dates. For an IRMS officer, it is a career compass, a legal shield, and sometimes, a battleground. Before understanding the list, one must understand the service. Until 2019, Indian Railways’ top management was divided into silos: IRTS (Traffic), IRSEE (Electrical), IRSE (Engineering), IRSS (Stores), IRAS (Accounts), and IRPS (Personnel). Each had its own cadre, promotional paths, and — critically — its own seniority list.
The government’s reform, the , merged all Group ‘A’ technical and non-technical services (excluding accounts and RPF) into a single, unified cadre. The idea: create a generalist, lateral-moving manager for the 21st century. IRMS SENIORITY LIST
In the labyrinthine corridors of Indian Railways — Asia’s largest rail network employing over 1.2 million people — order is not merely a virtue; it is a necessity. At the heart of this administrative machinery lies a document that is both mundane and fiercely contested: The IRMS Seniority List . For the uninitiated, it is a spreadsheet of names and dates
And for the nation, the fairness and transparency of that list may well determine how fast — and how safely — its railways run into the future. ~1,150 Tone: Investigative, explanatory, neutral with subtle advocacy for transparency Target Audience: Civil service aspirants, journalists, railway historians, policymakers, IRMS officers, RTI activists Until 2019, Indian Railways’ top management was divided
