In the wake of Partition, with Lahore, the former provincial capital of the undivided Punjab, now in Pakistan, Trivedi was immediately beset with numerous challenges upon assuming the governorship of East Punjab. His ministers were forced to work without offices, clerical staff or communication networks; with all telephone and telegraph lines only routed through Lahore, direct contact could not be made with Delhi. The limited infrastructure soon complicated the government's response to the communal massacres which raged across the region during the autumn of 1947. In addition, Trivedi faced severe difficulties in supporting the massive influx of Hindu and Sikh refugees flooding into East Punjab from Pakistan. Trivedi was the first governor of the renamed state of Punjab from 1950 to 1953, the first governor of Andhra Pradesh from 1 October 1953 till 1 August 1957. He also was a member of The Planning Commission of India from 28 October 1957 till 1 December 1963; and was the deputy Chairperson of the Planning Commission of India from 22 September 1963 till 2 December 1963, who served as the
President of the Bharat Scouts and Guides from February 1967 to October 1973. After a long, happy and meaningful life, Trivedi retired and spent the rest of his life in his hometown, where he died on 15 March 1980, aged 86. ==Personal life==