Linked decisions (same cabinet meeting)
In the same round of approvals, the government raised annual honorariums to ₹14,000 for Booth Level Officers (BLOs) and ₹18,000 for BLO Supervisors, signalling wider administrative support measures ahead of the polls.
Who is eligible & how the scheme works
The pension is paid under the JP Senani Samman Pension Scheme, named after Loknayak Jayaprakash Narayan and launched by Bihar in 2009. Eligibility is tied to participation in the 1974 JP movement and imprisonment during the Emergency (typically under MISA/DIR), with two duration slabs: 1–6 months and >6 months. On the death of a pensioner, the surviving spouse is entitled to the same amount, according to official summaries.
How many people benefit
Current coverage is around 3,354 beneficiaries in Bihar, according to the home department figures quoted in city reports and policy roundups. CM Nitish Kumar—himself eligible as a veteran of the JP movement—has not availed the pension.
Why it matters (context & continuity)
The move honours a specific cohort in Bihar’s political history while aligning with recent social-support hikes (e.g., the state raised universal social-security pensions to ₹1,100/month in July). By updating amounts that had not kept pace with inflation, the cabinet connects symbolic recognition with meaningful monthly support.
Political-historical backdrop
The JP movement (1974) and the Emergency (1975–77) remain central to Bihar’s political memory. The cabinet decision explicitly situates the pension as a “samman” (honour) pension, distinguishing it from general welfare schemes and reaffirming the state’s long-running policy track since 2009. National and state outlets report the same rates and slabs, indicating broad consensus on the change.