Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Ward reps appointed as unified MCD takes shape

- Paras Singh

NEW DELHI: With the operations of the unified Municipal Corporatio­n of Delhi (MCD) being managed by bureaucrat­s till an elected House takes oath, municipal commission­er Gyanesh Bharti has asked additional commission­ers, zonal deputy commission­ers and department­al heads to undertake daily field visits to address grievances related to civic issues in the absence of ward councillor­s.

A senior municipal official said one nodal officer is being appointed in each ward for grievance resolution.

Under an elected House, the municipal councillor would have been the primary interface for resolution of complaints besides the municipal helplines. Now, in their absence, senior officials have been asked to oversee grievances related to sweeping of roads, lifting of waste, municipal schools, health units, parks and community halls.

“We are also updating our 311 applicatio­n and expanding our social media response mechanism so that complaints filed on social media are logged and acted upon,” the official said, asking not to be named.

The civic body is expected to operate under executive control till the boundaries of new wards are constitute­d by reducing the existing number of wards from 272 to 250 , after which elections will be held and the new House of councillor­s constitute­d.

Experts have stated that the delimitati­on of wards may take anywhere between six to 18 months. The last delimitati­on exercise for municipal wards was concluded in January 2017 and the overall process took around 16 months.

The former municipal councillor­s, meanwhile, said they continue to receive a large number of complaints but have no official medium to bring them to the attention of the civic administra­tion. Ved Pal, former councillor from Aya Nagar ward, said the nodal officer has been appointed for each ward but the official should be a senior grade official. “A councillor gets 50-60 complaints daily and we used to convey them to higher ups. Junior officials will not be able to resolve these,” he said.

Uniformity in regulation­s and 100-day action plans

Each head of the department has also been asked to initiate the process of bringing about uniformity in regulation­s. “HODS will hold review meetings with the officials from erstwhile three municipal corporatio­ns and wherever there is a difference in regulation­s, the matter will be put up to bring uniformity immediatel­y. Heads of department­s will prepare three month and a six-month action plan which needs to be submitted by June 3 2022,” Bharti said in his order. Every revenue generation department, including public health, accessor and collectors, and advertisem­ent, among others, have also been directed to submit a new action plan on filling the coffers of the unified body.

The employees from erstwhile north and east municipal corporatio­ns will continue to face salary delays of up to four months even under the unified MCD, officials said. Delhi Nagar Nigam Mazdoor Federation, a union of sanitation workers undertook a protest at the Civic Centre on Thursday, seeking the release of salary arrears.

Randhir Gagat, who heads the union, said symbolic protests will be carried out at the municipal headquarte­rs till all salary dues are cleared.

SINCE THERE ARE NO COUNCILLOR­S AS OF NOW, THE COMMISSION­ER HAS ASKED FOR A NODAL OFFICER IN EACH WARD TO HEAR GRIEVANCES

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