Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Real estate watchdog tied up in regulation­s, likely to miss deadline

- Moushumi Das Gupta moushumi.gupta@hindustant­imes.com

The failure of most states to put in place a regulator ahead of the April 30 deadline has put a question mark on the Centre’s effort to protect home buyers by giving them a platform to resolve disputes quickly.

Madhya Pradesh is the only state to have set up the real estate regulatory authority (Rera), a year after Parliament passed a law to regulate residentia­l and commercial projects and protect the interests of buyers who complain of delays and cost overruns.

“We have written to states, held multiple national and regional consultati­ons to ensure they expedite the process. But we have not got response from some states, including West Bengal,” said a housing and poverty alleviatio­n ministry official.

The real estate regulatory authority act that came into force on May 1, 2016, provides for a regulator in states to oversee transactio­ns and settle disputes.

States were given a year to get the regulator in place. Without these regulators, the realty law will be ineffectua­l.

Builders have to register a project coming up on 500sq m or more with the regulator before they launch or even advertise their plan.

Only Madhya Pradesh had set up the Rera, minister of state, housing and urban poverty alleviatio­n Rao Inderjit Singh told the Rajya Sabha on April 6. India has 29 states and seven union territorie­s, which are administer­ed by the Centre. Some states and UTs such as Delhi, Chandigarh, Haryana, Maharashtr­a, Punjab, Kerala, Rajasthan and Andaman & Nicobar Islands have put in place an interim regulator.

States can name any officer, preferably from the housing department, as the regulator to hear buyers’ complaints till a Rera is set up.

In the absence of the Rera, developers won’t have to register projects if they complete it before the regulator is notified. The law covers new as well as those projects where completion certificat­e has not been given. A buyer hit by delays won’t get any relief.

This is not all. Many states are still to notify the rules, without which the realty law can’t kick in. Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, Gujarat, Andhra Pradesh, Odisha and Delhi are the only ones to have drawn up the rules.

While states had to frame their own law using the central act as a template, the rules for the UTs were notified by the Centre. States can make changes to the central law but they can’t completely dilute the parent act.

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