CSIR Endorses Centre's Decision on Pension Options for Compassionate Appointees
Quick Look
- The CSIR has endorsed the Centre's decision to allow compassionate appointees, who applied before Jan 1, 2004, but joined later, to opt for the Old Pension Scheme (OPS).
- This follows a key letter from the Department of Personnel, potentially setting a precedent for other Central Autonomous Bodies.
AI-generated summary
Why It Matters
The Council of Scientific & Industrial Research (CSIR) endorsed a Centre's decision allowing compassionate appointees, who applied before January 1, 2004, but joined service later, to opt for the Old Pension Scheme (OPS). This follows a directive from the Department of Personnel.
The Council of Scientific & Industrial Research endorsed the Centre's decision on pension options. This move allows compassionate appointees to opt for the Old Pension Scheme. These individuals applied for jobs before January 1, 2004, but joined later. A key letter from the Department of Personnel facilitated this change for CSIR appointees. Other Central Autonomous Bodies may now follow this precedent for their employees.
In a move that could prompt may Central Autonomous Bodies (CABs) to offer the Old Pension Scheme (OPS) to eligible compassionate ground appointees, the Council of Scientific & Industrial Research (CSIR) has endorsed the Centre’s decision to extend the OPS option to those who had applied for compassionate appointment before January 1, 2004, but joined service on or after that date.
In the CSIR, which is an autonomous body, there were many compassionate ground appointees who had applied for the job before January 1, 2004, the day when National Pension System (NPS) was implemented, but got their jobs years later. These appointees got the NPS as their pension scheme.
What worked in favour of CSIR compassionate ground appointees?
On March 3, 2023, the Department of Pension and Pensioners’ Welfare in an office memorandum (OM) had given a one-time option to join OPS to central government employees who had been recruited in job results declared on or before December 31, 2003, against vacancies which occurred before January 1, 2004, and were covered under the NPS on joining service on after January 1, 2004.
Even though CAB employees also got the option to join OPS later on, the same option was not granted to compassionate ground appointees.
What was the game-changer for CSIR compassionate ground appointees?
The game-changer for such CSIR appointees was a letter dated June 22, 2026, from the Department of Personnel, Public Grievances and Pensions, which mentioned that the central government had given the OPS option to compassionate ground appointees.
In the letter, the department had said, “The family member who was eligible for consideration and had applied for compassionate appointment on or before December 12, 2003, shall be considered under the CCS (Pension) Rules, 2021, or OPS, by the concerned ministries/departments.”
It was a green signal to many CABs who could provide the OPS pension option to compassionate ground appointees.
CSIR endorses DoPPW’s order
In an office memorandum dated July 7, 2026, the CSIR, endorsed Centre’s decision related to compassionate ground appointees.
“The undersigned is directed to state that the competent authority has accorded approval to forward the Office Memorandum No. 57/05/2021-P&PW(B)/compassionate/10593 dated June 22, 2026, on the above subject issued by director, Department of Pension and Pension Welfare, Ministry of Personnel, Public Grievance and Pensions, Government of India, to all CSIR labs./instts./units for information, guidance and compliance,” says the OM.
Here, the big question is that will this order apply to all compassionate ground appointees working in CABs under the same arrangement?
The decision doesn’t apply to all such compassionate ground appointees working in CABs under similar conditions. CABs, one by one or simultaneously, are free to endorse the ministry’s decision. But they can choose to implement it when they want.
However, initiative by the CSIR can be considered as the beginning of that process where many CABs may follow it to offer the OPS option.
What to Watch
AI outlook — possibilities, not facts
Other Central Autonomous Bodies may adopt the OPS option for eligible compassionate appointees.
Likely · Within months
Open Questions
- Will other Central Autonomous Bodies follow suit?
- What is the timeline for implementation in other CABs?

