Karnataka Gives Munish Moudgil CM's Office Concurrent Charge in Five-Officer IAS Reshuffle

Karnataka reassigns five IAS officers, placing Greater Bengaluru Authority's Special Commissioner in concurrent charge of the Chief Minister's programme office.

Jun 8, 2026 - 09:58
Jun 8, 2026 - 10:13
Karnataka Gives Munish Moudgil CM's Office Concurrent Charge in Five-Officer IAS Reshuffle

The Karnataka state government has issued a new round of executive orders reshuffling five senior Indian Administrative Service officers across urban development, transport, cooperative governance, and the Chief Minister's executive coordination office — a set of appointments designed to tighten operational linkages between Bengaluru's fast-expanding administrative institutions. The most significant placement involves Munish Moudgil, currently Special Commissioner of the Greater Bengaluru Authority, who has been given concurrent charge as Principal Secretary to the Chief Minister (Programme and Project Implementation). The dual role bridges the capital city's primary expansion authority with the Chief Minister's core project monitoring office, designed to accelerate oversight of major civic initiatives. Deepa Cholan has been appointed the new Secretary for the Department of Transport, while Cauvery B B joins the state's urban development framework as Secretary for Urban Development. Dr. Venkatesh M V takes on the role of Registrar for Cooperative Societies, overseeing Karnataka's extensive rural and urban cooperative networks. Selvamani R has been formally posted as Commissioner for Transport and Road Safety, tasked with overhauling transit regulatory frameworks and advancing intelligent traffic management architecture across the state. Bureaucratic analysts note that the reshuffle is structured to establish seamless coordination between transport policy, municipal planning, and the direct executive implementation channels managed from the Chief Minister's office. The alignment is seen as particularly relevant to Bengaluru's ongoing urbanisation challenges, where decentralisation, infrastructure development, and traffic congestion demand tightly coordinated bureaucratic responses across multiple administrative tiers.