Shillong residents navigate a monsoon that feels different
Residents of Shillong are grappling with an erratic monsoon season this year, as traditional weather patterns give way to unpredictable spells of sun and sudden downpours.
While June typically marks a period of consistent rainfall and overcast skies, the current season has been characterised by its inconsistency. Despite forecasts predicting a significant monsoon, rainfall has remained scattered. Clear skies often break through on days when heavy rain is expected, leaving many residents caught off guard.
The shift has become a primary talking point among commuters, shopkeepers, and office workers. “You look at the sky and think it’s about to pour, but nothing happens,” said one local commuter. “Then it rains suddenly when you least expect it.”
The primary concern for many is not the volume of rain, but its timing. Residents report that weather apps frequently fail to align with the actual conditions on the ground, leading many to carry umbrellas daily as a precaution regardless of the forecast.
Long-time residents note a distinct departure from the seasonal rhythm they once relied on. “There used to be a certain regularity to the seasons,” one resident observed. “You knew roughly what to expect. Now it feels different.”
While meteorologists continue to study whether these shifts reflect long-term climate changes or temporary seasonal fluctuations, the sense of uncertainty in the city is palpable. In a city where rain shapes business activity, travel plans, and social routines, the breakdown of a predictable cycle is a significant disruption.
As the monsoon progresses, heavier rainfall may still arrive in the coming weeks. However, for many in Shillong, the most unusual weather phenomenon this year is no longer the rain itself, but the inability to predict when it will fall.
Uniform name plates
Meghalaya has a new message for the who’s who: if you’re not inside your car, don’t carry the name plate.
From June 1, the state’s new Display of Name Boards on Motor Vehicles Regulations came into force, banning the casual practice of slapping department names or lofty job titles on a vehicle unless the Transport Department signs off.
The rulebook reads like an RSVP — the Governor, Chief Minister, ministers, MPs, MLAs, judges, deputy commissioners, superintendents of police, the chief secretary, the DGP and other senior figures get to keep their name boards — but only while they’re actually travelling in the car. University heads aren’t exempt from this decorum: Vice-Chancellors, Pro Vice-Chancellors and Registrars join the authorised club, albeit with their own light-blue boards rather than the standard white-on-red.
There’s more. The government has specified design and placement so every plate looks uniform. Most official boards must be white lettering on red; university boards get the gentler blue. And importantly, having a name board does not unlock privileges — sirens, beacons, red lights and tinted glass remain off-limits unless separate Home Department rules permit them.
In a place where a nameplate on a car can serve as a marker of access and influence, the order clamps down on theatrics. For politicians who treat visibility as part of their brand, this new rule will prove to be a dampener. Let’s wait and watch.





