Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Bareilly, Erode make it to fresh list of 9 smart cities

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com (With agency inputs)

PROGRAMME Rae Bareilly, Ghaziabad fail to find space in the list of 99 cities chosen so far NEW DELHI:

Senior Congress leader Sonia Gandhi’s constituen­cy Rae Bareilly and Delhi’s next door neighbour Ghaziabad are among four cities from Uttar Pradesh that failed to make it to the final list of 100 smart cities under the NDA government’s flagship programme.

On Friday, Union housing and urban affairs minister Hardeep Singh Puri announced a list of nine of the remaining smart cities. These are Bareilly, Moradabad, Saharanpur, Bihar Sharif, Silvassa, Erode, Daman & Diu, Itanagar and Kavaratti.

So far, 90 cities have been selected under the programme, launched by Prime Minister Narendra Modi in June 2015.

On Friday, the Centre was set to announce the names of the final ten cities but one of them, Shillong, could not submit its proposal.

The state government has been given two weeks time to submit its proposal failing which, another city will be selected for the programme.

The nine cities have proposed an investment of ₹12,824 crore.

Meant to change the way urban India lives, smart cities will enjoy uninterrup­ted power and water supplies, internet connectivi­ty, e-governance along with quality infrastruc­ture, according to the government.

Under the programme, the Centre will spend ₹48,000 crore over five years.

Each city will get ₹100 crore per year.

A matching fund of ₹48,000 crore will have to be contribute­d by states from their internal resources or through market borrowing and through private sector.

The selection is based on the scores cities get for carrying out urban reforms in areas including sanitation and governance. Cities that score the highest will be picked for the project, to be implemente­d over a 10-year period. Meant to change the way urban India lives, the govt says smart cities will enjoy uninterrup­ted power and water supplies, Internet connectivi­ty, e-governance and quality infrastruc­ture

The number of cities that each state can select is based on a formula worked out by the urban developmen­t ministry that gives a 50:50 weightage to a state’s population and the number of statutory towns.

The nine cities were selected from among 15 cities.

Congress president Rahul Gandhi had hit out at the spending so far saying, “Dear Modi bhakts (followers), out of 9,860 crore for the Smart Cities only 7% has been used...”

Puri had retorted saying saying the UPA government had spent only 68% of the ₹46,000 crore in its city-modernisat­ion JNNURM scheme in ten years.

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