3 min readNew DelhiJul 1, 2026 04:07 AM IST
From being mistaken for salespersons and facing angry residents to finding locked homes and families that had shifted, booth level officers (BLOs) hit the ground on the first day of Delhi’s Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls on Tuesday, going door-to-door to distribute enumeration forms.
“When I went to one house, the residents shouted at me saying they didn’t want to fill any form. So, I shouted back,” said Neha Rawat, a school teacher deployed as a BLO in West Delhi’s Moti Nagar. “Then they told me that they thought I was a salesperson. But will you shout at someone who has been walking in the sun all day?” she told The Indian Express.
According to the Election Commission, 1.68 lakh enumeration forms were distributed and 7,605 forms were digitised on the first day of the exercise. More than 13,000 BLOs have been deployed across Delhi, with house-to-house visits scheduled to continue until July 29.
Rawat had carried 126 forms for distribution but could hand over only 92. “Some houses were locked, some were under repair, some residents had gone abroad on vacation, and in a few cases, the women in our records had got married and shifted from the premises,” she said.
“I was in the field since morning until around 8 pm and have distributed about 100 forms,” said 45-year-old Naresh, a primary school teacher on BLO duty in Dharampura Extension in Najafgarh.
While several BLOs spent the day visiting households, others used the first day to prepare for the nearly three-month-long exercise. Each BLO has been provided a register in which they will get signatures of every elector to whom they distribute the forms.
“I spent the entire day writing down names and making columns for all the electors to whom I will distribute forms tomorrow,” said Ritu Maheshwari, a BLO in Old Delhi’s Sitaram Bazar.
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“I arranged my forms in the order in which I plan to visit households,” said Kuljeet Kaur, a BLO in Moti Nagar.
As part of the SIR process, voters are required to fill the enumeration forms and return them to the BLOs. If a house is found locked during verification, BLOs will leave the forms at the premises and make at least three attempts to collect the filled form. If the form is still not returned, the BLO may record probable reasons such as the elector being absent, having shifted residence, being deceased or having a duplicate registration based on local inquiries.
In Delhi, the draft electoral roll will be published on August 5, following which claims and objections will be invited until September 4. While disposal of claims and objections will continue until October 3, the final electoral roll is slated to be published on October 7.
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