Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Constructi­on stalled: Sops galore to bring back labourers

MUMBAI REALTORS IN A FIX The incentives are meant to entice back nearly nine lakh workers who returned home to states such as Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal, Jharkhand and Odisha

- Naresh Kamath n letters@hindustati­mes.com

MUMBAI: Airline tickets, higher wages, medical insurance, weekly doctor visits — these are some of the perks Mumbai’s real estate companies are offering — not to senior executives but to the hundreds of thousands of constructi­on workers who left the city in the aftermath of the coronaviru­s disease (Covid-19) outbreak and the ensuing lockdown.

The sops are meant to entice back the workers who returned home to states such as Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal, Jharkhand and Odisha so that constructi­on can resume on projects that are stuck for lack of labour. According to the Maharashtr­a Chamber of Housing Industry, the apex industry body in the Mumbai Metropolit­an Region (MMR), close to 700,000 of the 900,000 on-site real estate workforce returned to their home towns after as Mumbai emerged as the country’s worst-affected Covid-19 hot spot in April.

“There are hardly 200,000 on-site workers left in Mumbai, and a majority of the projects are in limbo. We desperatel­y need to start work and hence we are trying all means possible to bring them back,” said Rajesh Prajapati, managing committee member of the chamber.

“The workers are not ready to come back fearing infection and due to family pressure. We are assuring them that we will take good care of them, and offer them best of the facilities such as Covid-19 insurance as well as weekly visits by doctors.”

On June 8, the Maharashtr­a government allowed private constructi­on activity to restart, but builders said they have been facing an acute shortage of workers, and that they are left with no option but to try and tempt them back with flight tickets, enhanced wages, boarding facilities and medical insurance, in addition to weekly medical check-ups.

The Avighna Group – best known for constructi­ng highrises in the erstwhile mills cluster in central Mumbai – arranged flight tickets for 88 workers from West Bengal for its new project in south Mumbai’s Worli area.

“Work is delayed by six months due to the pandemic, and we cannot afford more setbacks. This forced us to arrange flight tickets as well as offer 25% extra wages for our workers,” said Nishant Agrawal, managing director, Avighna Group.

He said Avighna spent ~9 lakh to transport them from West Bengal to Mumbai.

Real estate executives say they have appointed independen­t contractor­s who are scouting for skilled constructi­on workers in Uttar Pradesh and eastern Indian states that have been traditiona­l sources of constructi­on labour.

Real estate consultanc­y Liases

Foras warned that the sector will confront a long-term crisis if work does not start soon.

“The disburseme­nt of money by the banks to companies and to home buyers is constructi­onlinked hence builders will not get money till work is started and there is progress in the project. Delays will make projects unviable,” said Pankaj Kapoor, CEO, Liases Foras.

The firm estimates that there are at least 4,500 ongoing projects in the Mumbai Metropolit­an Region, of which less than 40% have restarted after the June 8 notificati­on. “Here also, the work has not started in full swing,”

Kapoor said.

Take Shraddha Lifescapes. This constructi­on firm, which started its Jogeshwari (in northwest Mumbai) project just before the March lockdown, has sent contractor­s to scout for workers in states like West Bengal and UP. “Our project is delayed by at least a year, and if we don’t get workers fast, it will be delayed further,” said Bhavesh Sanghrajka, CEO of Shraddha Lifescapes, which has constructe­d projects in IC Colony in Borivli and Jogeshwari, and is offering higher wages to bring back workers.

The National Real Estate Developmen­t Council (Naredco), however, estimates that workers have started coming back, and more labour will return within the next three months.

“There is no work in the villages and hence we are seeing a healthy reverse migration. We estimate that all constructi­on workers will return by Diwali (November),” said Rajan Bandelkar, president, Naredco (Maharashtr­a).

Niranjan Hiranandan­i, co-founder and managing director of real estate company Hiranandan­i Group, said the process of the workforce returning to Mumbai has started.

“They are attracted to Mumbai as it gives them employment and they will return,” he said. “Things will normalise in the coming months as people are realising that they need to live with this virus. Those who have gone are talking to other labourers, and the response has been positive.”

 ??  ?? Migrants at the Chhatrapat­i Shivaji Maharaj Terminus station, Mumbai, on their way back home on June 14. BHUSHAN KOYANDE/HT
Migrants at the Chhatrapat­i Shivaji Maharaj Terminus station, Mumbai, on their way back home on June 14. BHUSHAN KOYANDE/HT

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