Chandigarh, Oct. 2 -- UT administrator Gulab Chand Kataria's move of withdrawing the financial powers of senior officers and transferring it to the Union ministry of home affairs (MHA) has sparked confusion within the administration. This has also had a direct impact on the functioning of the engineering department, with tender allotments now stalled until further clarification is received. Acting on the Centre's directions, Kataria had issued the order on Tuesday, stripping heads of departments (HoDs), chief engineers, administrative secretaries, and even the chief secretary of their financial approval powers. Under the new system, final sanction for all plans, administrative approvals, expenditures (including works), public-private partnership (PPP) projects, and tenders will rest with the MHA. Until now, HoDs could approve works up to Rs.1.5 crore, chief engineers up to Rs.3 crore, administrative secretaries up to Rs.20 crore, the chief secretary up to Rs.50 crore, and the administrator up to Rs.100 crore. All these powers now stand revoked. The order has left officers puzzled, with many questioning whether even minor works worth a few lakhs will now require clearance from Delhi. "Since Tuesday's order, new projects have almost come to a halt. Without any financial powers at the HoD level, there is complete uncertainty. It is unclear whether small development works worth Rs.5-10 lakh will also need the MHA's nod," said a junior official from the engineering department. On Wednesday, several tenders were opened but their allotment was deferred until further clarification arrives. Meanwhile, the order specifies that ongoing projects and works for which work orders have already been issued will continue under the previous provisions. However, for all new schemes and tenders, MHA approval will be mandatory. Tenders that have been opened but not yet awarded will remain stalled. Notably, there is no change in technical sanctioning powers-executive engineers (XENs) will continue to have approval authority up to Rs.30 lakh, superintending engineers (SEs) up to Rs.1.8 crore, and chief engineers will retain full technical powers. Similarly, the chief secretary will still be empowered to authorise direct purchases of up to Rs.10 crore in emergency situations....