Header
TUESDAY, 23 JUNE 2026

Govt moves to deactivate dormant email accounts

554 identified; exercise aimed at cutting costs, tightening communication oversight

Published Jun 11
SHARE ON

PANAJI
In a move aimed at cutting avoidable expenditure and streamlining digital governance, the Goa Government has launched a statewide exercise to identify and deactivate dormant official email accounts that are no longer in use. A preliminary review has identified 554 official government email accounts that have remained dormant for periods ranging from 90 days to more than 525 days.

The Department of Information Technology, Electronics and Communications (DITE&C) has directed all government departments, autonomous bodies, corporations and other government entities to review official email accounts that have remained inactive for more than a year and submit their findings within 15 days.

The exercise comes in the wake of the National Informatics Centre (NIC) migrating government email services to a commercial subscription-based platform, under which each official email account now attracts an annual cost of approximately Rs 2,400.

Officials said the government is seeking to ensure that public funds are not spent on maintaining email accounts that are no longer operational or required.

"The department requests all heads of departments and authorised nodal officers to verify the status of the listed email accounts and submit the required information within 15 days," the circular stated.

The department has warned that email accounts found to be inactive and for which no response is received within the stipulated timeframe may be recommended for deactivation or deletion.

Sources said the review could also help identify accounts belonging to retired, transferred or former employees that may still be active in government records, thereby strengthening cybersecurity and administrative efficiency.

The department has urged all concerned authorities to treat the matter on priority and ensure timely compliance with the directive.


Recommended Stories

Published Jun 11
SHARE ON

State reports nearly two snake bites daily: Study

Medical experts stress need for better emergency care

The Goan Network
Published Jun 11
SHARE ON
State reports nearly two snake bites daily: Study

PANAJIThe recent death of Dr Ketan Bhatikar following a snake bite has shocked Goa and the medical fraternity, drawing attention to a neglected medical emergency that requires a co-ordinated response to prevent avoidable deaths.  A study by Dr Chetan Karekar and Dr Purvi Mishal of the forensic department at Goa Medical College (GMC), published a year ago in the international journal ‘The Academic’, recorded 1,663 snake-bite cases and 30 deaths between 2020 and…

Read more
Home HOME News GOA NEWS Global GLOBAL GOENKAR Search SEARCH
The Goan Footer