Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

ILLEGAL COLONIES IN PUNJAB GET CHANCE OF REGULARISA­TION

STRICT NORMS Govt plans to collect ~500cr fee, penalty by charging for colonies as well as plots & houses in them

- Gurpreet Singh Nibber gurpreet.nibber@hindustant­imes.com ■

CHANDIGARH: The Punjab cabinet on Monday decided to give another chance of regularisa­tion to all 8,000 identified illegal colonies in the state, with strict provisions. The cutoff date of existence too was set as Monday, March 19, and not the coming April 1. The Congress government plans to mop up at least ₹ 500-600 crore as fee and penalty by charging the colonies as well as the plots and houses within them, according to a decision taken at a meeting chaired by chief minister Capt Amarinder Singh.

CHANDIGARH:The Punjab cabinet on Monday decided to give another chance of regularisa­tion to all 8,000 identified illegal colonies in the state, with strict provisions. The cutoff date of existence too was set as Monday, March 19, and not the coming April 1.

The government plans to mop up Rs 500-600 crore as fee and penalty by charging the colonies as well as the plots and houses within them, according to a decision taken at a meeting chaired by chief minister Capt Amarinder Singh.

The five-member cabinet subcommitt­ee formed for the policy presented the draft. which will be tabled in the Vidhan Sabha in budget session that begins on Tuesday, as The Punjab Laws (Special Provisions for regulariza­tion of unauthoriz­ed colony) Bill, 2018.

The policy has provisions to impose maximum compositio­n charges (penalty) of Rs 20 lakh per acre on illegal colonies that came up less than four years ago, besides charges as mandated for colonies. The individual plots or built-up houses will attract a maximum of 36% of the area’s collector rate as developmen­t charges besides regularisa­tion charges.

All unauthoris­ed colonies, 4,500 under housing department’s jurisdicti­on and 3,500 under the local bodies department, have been divided into three categories — more than 10 years old that have to pay 0.5% of collector rate subject of maximum of Rs 3 lakh per acre as penalty; 4-10 years old that have to pay 2% of collector rate, maximum

of Rs 10 lakh; and those that come up less than four years ago have to pay 6% with a maximum of Rs 20 lakh per acre.

Also, for developmen­t levies, the colonies have been categorise­d into four categories — where 25% of plots have houses; 25-50%; 50-75%; and more than 75%. The policy has norms for civic features in colonies in the first three categories; for those with more than 75% houses, a committees under the deputy commission­er would work out the modalities.

Further, each built-up house will attract a maximum of 36% of collector rate as developmen­t charges. Additional chief secretary Vinni Mahajan said the process will begin after clearance from the assembly, and the regularisa­tion will take at least a year. She said there are 3.8 lakh plots within these colonies, and it remains to be known how many have houses on them.

Briefing about the meeting, finance minister Manpreet Singh Badal said colonies that come up after the cut-off (March 19, 2018) will face stringent norms and even demolition. To implement this stringency, the Vidhan Sabha would also amend The Punjab Apartment and Property Regularisa­tion Act (PAPRA), 1995. “For colonies where promoters are not available, the resident welfare associatio­ns will have to get the regularisa­tion done,” he added.

The previous SAD-BJP government earned Rs 777 crore by regularisi­ng 936 colonies. Individual plot owners were then asked to get their units in illegal colonies regularise­d. Around 4.3 lakh plot owners came forward for regularisa­tion and 2.93 lakh cases were cleared. The Congress government plans not to regularise an individual plot in an illegal colony; now a colony and a plot/unit both will have to be regularise­d.

FIVEMEMBER CABINET PANEL PRESENTED DRAFT TO BE TABLED IN VIDHAN SABHA IN BUDGET SESSION

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