NEW DELHI: In a major effort to streamline trade regulations while reinforcing consumer safeguards, the Department of Consumer Affairs, Government of India, convened a crucial regional review meeting on May 27, 2026. The high-level consultation brought together key administrative representatives from Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Kerala, Puducherry, Tamil Nadu, and Telangana.
The meeting, held in alignment with recommendations from a Cabinet Secretariat High-Level Committee (HLC) and its deregulation cell, centered on driving the rapid rollout of regulatory overhauls introduced to the Legal Metrology Act, 2009 through the newly enacted Jan Vishwas (Amendment of Provisions) Act, 2026.
Key Areas of Focus and Discussion
The regional conference mapped out a comprehensive digitization and ease-of-doing-business strategy focused on the following foundational areas:
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Registration-Based Framework: Rolling out a friction-free shift from conventional licensing protocols to simplified registrations.
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Decriminalisation & Improvement Notices: Implementing alternative enforcement mechanisms for minor procedural slip-ups.
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Infrastructure Expansion via GATCs: Scaling up the network of Government Approved Test Centres (GATCs) and expanding the categories of weighing instruments under their purview.
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Digital Integration: Driving faster and seamless consumer and industrial service deliveries through the centralized e-Maap portal.
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Capacity Building: Enhancing the technical proficiency of state-level inspection cadres.
Major Reform Mechanics Evaluated
1. Transitioning from “Licensing” to “Registration”
The Department requested participating states to ensure that shifting away from traditional licenses translates into a genuine, trust-based regulatory framework. Central officials emphasized that registrations must be granted automatically upon the digital submission of required paperwork, completely eliminating prior field inspections or bureaucratic delays.
2. The “Improvement Notice” Mechanism
As part of the Jan Vishwas decriminalisation mandate, the Department reviewed the newly minted “Improvement Notice” system. Under this protocol, first-time procedural violations under specified sections of the Legal Metrology Act will prompt an official ‘Improvement Notice’ rather than immediate penal action. This gives businesses a fair window to correct non-compliance voluntarily, effectively lowering litigation backlogs and boosting the Ease of Doing Business.
3. Defining GATC Jurisdictions and Rules
States were urged to expedite pending amendments to their regional Enforcement and GATC Rules. Representatives from the southern states confirmed that their revised drafts are currently in advanced stages of legal approval and will be formally notified shortly.
Important Jurisdictional Clarification: The Department explicitly clarified that the Legal Metrology Act, 2009 does not permit the inter-state verification of weights and measures. Consequently, any GATC authorized by the Director of Legal Metrology can legally execute verification or re-verification procedures only within the borders of the specific State or UT for which its approval was issued.
4. Upskilling Officers through IILM Ranchi
To ensure the automated system operates smoothly, the central department announced that specialized technical training modules for local Legal Metrology Officers will be conducted via the Indian Institute of Legal Metrology (IILM) in Ranchi.
Balances: Compliance Ease vs. Consumer Protection
While the Centre is actively cutting red tape to benefit honest traders and corporate entities, it firmly reiterated that consumer defense remains uncompromised. The Department stated that strict enforcement, punitive actions, and zero-tolerance measures against fraud, instrument tampering, and consumer-facing violations will continue in full force under the updated Legal Metrology guidelines.

