Bureaucratic red tape delays KAS appointments; aspiring candidates pin hopes on new government

Sunday 24 May 2026 12:03 AM IST

THIRUVANANTHAPURAM: Three and a half months after the publication of the rank list, appointments to the prestigious Kerala Administrative Service (KAS) remain stalled in bureaucratic red tape. Despite repeated reminders from the Kerala Public Service Commission (PSC) urging the government to finalise the necessary administrative procedures, official corridors have maintained a stony silence, leaving hundreds of qualified candidates in limbo.

The PSC published the KAS rank list on January 30, 2026, to fill 31 notified vacancies. The selection followed a rigorous, three-tier format modelled after the Union Civil Services, comprising a two-paper preliminary exam, a three-paper main exam, and a final interview. However, the issuance of formal recruitment recommendations has hit a roadblock because the state government has failed to provide the PSC with definitive details regarding deputation reserve posts. With the rank list set to expire on January 30, 2027, candidates are running against time and looking toward the newly formed government for a swift resolution.

Key bottlenecks:

  • Lack of Clarity: The government is yet to finalise the 31 specific posts out of a shortlisted 46, despite a high-level committee of departmental secretaries—led by the Chief Secretary—being tasked with the assignment.
  • Institutional Resistance: The recruitment drive faces quiet friction from Secretariat staff and established service organisations, who view the KAS framework as a threat to their career progression.
  • Legacy Issues: Ambiguity still surrounds the promotion policy for the 105 cadre officers appointed in the first KAS batch back in 2021.

The second batch of KAS was envisioned to mirror the All India Services, allowing officers to be deputed to various state boards, corporations, and institutions. While 31 vacancies were officially reported to the PSC, the administrative order required to operationalise these placements remains caught in a bureaucratic deadlock. Furthermore, reports indicate that reservation representation quotas from the previous recruitment cycle remain unfulfilled, adding another layer of complexity to the ongoing crisis.