Hindustan Times (Gurugram)

Reforms fizzle out for want of enforcemen­t

Despite offering them online, the municipal corporatio­ns have failed to make several services smooth and corruption­free. Building plans are case in point

- Parvez Sultan parvez.sultan@hindustant­imes.com n

NEW DELHI: Several reforms introduced in the recent years to augment efficiency, improve responsive­ness, and weed out corruption in Delhi’s three municipal corporatio­ns have remained unproducti­ve. Apart from putting various services online, one of the big-ticket initiative­s undertaken was simplifica­tion and faster approval for building plans. However, due to procedural issues, lack of enforcemen­t, and shortage of staff, it has hardly made a difference on the ground --failing to curb illegal constructi­ons.

Statistics show that the number of approval granted by the corporatio­ns has constantly been falling since 2012-13, which means just a few people were applying for approval of their building plans. In 2011, the unified MCD launched online building plan sanction system. It approved 740 plans. Though the number crossed 8,000 (highest so far) mark the next year but it started declining by 2013.

Following the ‘ease of doing business: constructi­on permits’ project by the Central government, the three civic bodies stopped accepting offline requests for building plan and made the process completely online in April last year. From April 8, 2016 to March 20, 2017, the civic bodies have sanctioned 2,342 maps.

According to an estimate, only 5% to 10% of the total population in the city obtains building plans and nearly 80% of the constructi­on is either unauthoris­ed or doesn’t match with the approved plan.

A former senior municipal corporatio­n official, who was closely associated with digitisati­on of services including online sanctionin­g of building plans, said until the approach is changed and proper enforcemen­t of law is not guaranteed, the system cannot improve.

“Vested interests do not allow the reforms to take root. The 30-day rule exists on papers, when an applicatio­n is submitted, they keep raising objections until one doesn’t succumb to their ‘demand’,” he said.

Citing one of the shortcomin­gs in the procedure, he said a person, who intends to build his house, has to get plan prepared and submitted by an architect empanelled by the municipal corporatio­ns. “There is no fixed charge to avail architect services and the fee is decided by them,” the official said.

He said implementa­tion of building by-laws in several areas of Delhi is tough given the unplanned growth of the city. “No building plan can be sanctioned in the Walled city, rural and unauthoris­ed colonies because they just don’t fulfil basic requiremen­ts for approval. As per the provisions, there should be certain width of road or space in the area to move rescue vehicles in case of any disaster. This is one of the big issues in Old Delhi, where lanes are just three feet wide. So, a plan cannot be approved there. Rules will have to be tweaked,” he said.

In this case, the owner has to resort to unfair means and this is one lacuna in the rules, he said.

Omesh Sehgal, Delhi’s former chief secretary, said the rules should be amended and the number of documents required for sanction of building plan should be rationalis­ed. “If one goes for seeking the approval for building plan, the system asks for various papers and if you don’t submit, it does not accept your request. Your agony does not end there, the officials keep harassing you thereafter on one pretext or another,” he said.

The other area of concern is deviation from sanctioned plan or illegal constructi­on. On occasions, it has been seen that even after approval from the corporatio­ns, people alters plans. An official of the engineerin­g department of North Delhi Municipal Corporatio­n said random inspection of the site is conducted to check whether the owner adheres to the approved map.

“This is where the problem starts. No reform will help without enforcemen­t. I have hardly seen severe action against any engineerin­g or building department officials and councillor­s. Just to maintain records, token or cosmetic demolition is done. When the Delhi High Court ended the system of monitoring of unauthoris­ed constructi­on through court commission­ers in 2009, it was promised by the MCD that action will be taken against the top official of the zone if any violation is found. Have they even filed a complaint against any senior officer?,” said a councillor, requesting anonymity.

Dr Aqil Ahmed, incharge of ‘ease of doing business: constructi­on permits’, however, denied any discrepanc­y and scope for malpractic­e in the online system. “We have successful­ly been approving plans in record time. We have cleared a plan in 27 minutes. Earlier, it would take around 18 days. We have fixed 30 days as the maximum time limit for the process to be completed,” he said.

He said now it is impossible to hold a plan without a reason for long as the system is monitored by the union government and only 1-3 % applicatio­ns are rejected because of discrepanc­ies in documents pertaining to the title of the plot.

On engagement of an architect, he said, “Because, a common man does not have proper understand­ing of by-laws, hence a building plan is required to be submitted with the help of an architect. For the purpose, the corporatio­ns have empanelled around 1, 040 architect.”

The experts involved in research and policy making on urban developmen­t also say the municipali­ties can’t be squarely blamed for this as overnight changes are not possible.

Jagan Shah, Director, National Institute of Urban Affairs (NIUA), said it requires public participat­ion and needs joint concentrat­ed efforts by all stakeholde­rs.

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 ?? HT FILE PHOTO ?? Officials say only 5% to 10% buildings in Delhi come up after getting mandatory plan approval from the municipal corporatio­ns.
HT FILE PHOTO Officials say only 5% to 10% buildings in Delhi come up after getting mandatory plan approval from the municipal corporatio­ns.

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