Age relief after lost years: How CET delays forced Haryana to reset police recruitment rules
The Haryana government’s decision to grant age relaxation for police constable recruitment is not just a routine policy tweak. It reflects an attempt to correct the impact of delayed examinations that cost many young aspirants their eligibility through no fault of their own.On Thursday, the state announced a three-year age relaxation for candidates appearing for the Common Entrance Test (CET) under the police constable recruitment drive. The move comes after the CET was not conducted following the 2022 examination cycle, leaving a large group of candidates stuck between preparation and disqualification.
A recruitment gap that costs aspirants time
For competitive exams, time is not a neutral factor. Age limits are fixed, but exam schedules are not always reliable. After 2022, when the CET did not take place, candidates continued to wait, prepare, and age out of eligibility.This created a structural imbalance: the system paused, but the candidates’ age did not. The government’s decision seeks to acknowledge that gap and restore a level playing field for those affected.
‘Duty to do justice’: Government’s Rationale
Chief Minister Nayab Singh Saini described the move as a matter of justice rather than relaxation. Speaking to ANI, he said, “…Haryana Govt has always stood with the youth. With regard to the Police Constable recruitment, the youth of the state had been meeting me at my residence. We had assured them relaxation in age in CET exam. We have made a decision on this age relaxation. Taking the demands of the youth who met me very seriously, necessary directions have been given. After 2022, due to the CET exam not being conducted, the eligible youth who suffered losses – it is the duty of our government to do justice to them.” The statement underlines a key concern raised by aspirants: eligibility was lost not because of lack of merit or effort, but because the recruitment calendar broke down.
Why age relaxation matters in police recruitment
Police recruitment exams attract a large number of candidates from rural and semi-urban backgrounds, many of whom invest several years preparing. When exams are delayed, age limits can quietly eliminate candidates who are otherwise fully qualified.By granting a one-time relaxation, the government is signalling that administrative delays should not permanently shut candidates out of public service opportunities.
Linked to a larger youth-centric policy push
The announcement came on a day when the Chief Minister also launched the National Education Evaluation and Validation (NEEV) Portal, aimed at strengthening the implementation of the National Education Policy through continuous evaluation and data-based monitoring.Memoranda of Understanding were also signed under the ‘Gyan Setu’ initiative between the Golden Jubilee Haryana Institute for Fiscal Management and several universities to promote academic collaboration, research integration, and institutional capacity building.
Education, skills, and long-term vision
Referring to the Vision Document-2047, aligned with the Prime Minister’s goal of a developed India by 2047, Saini said Haryana is positioning education as a central pillar of long-term development. He added that the National Education Policy integrates knowledge with practical skills to help youth become self-reliant and economically productive.
Restoring trust after delay
At its core, the age relaxation decision is about restoring trust. For thousands of CET aspirants, it reopens a door that had closed due to administrative inertia rather than individual failure.In doing so, the Haryana government has acknowledged a simple truth of public recruitment: when the system falters, it is the state’s responsibility, not the candidate’s burden, to set it right.(With inputs from ANI)