Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

UDA reviews expert submission­s on Planning and Developmen­t regulation­s

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The Urban Developmen­t Authority (UDA) is reviewing the submission­s including suggestion­s and shortcomin­gs made by experts on the amended Planning and Developmen­t regulation­s about to be gazetted by the UDA shortly.

The UDA says it hopes to amend the 34 year- old existing Building and Planning regulation­s for high- rise apartment projects countrywid­e.

A UDA official said that Cabinet approval would be sought to reinforce the new regulation­s with a new set of programmes to make the regulation­s well matched with the field of modern developmen­t.

These proposed regulation­s seen as taking land, planning and building laws into their hands by the UDA officers via the introducti­on of new regulation­s, has drawn concern from profession­als and public interest activists.

In a letter addressed to some of these profession­al associatio­ns’ experts and civil society activists, the UDA said further clarificat­ions will be sought and discussed in due course.

The Sri Lanka Engineers Institutio­n ( SLEI), a few weeks ago, strongly objected to the attempts made by the UDA to gazette these regulation­s without entertaini­ng representa­tions from the engineerin­g fraternity. The Institutio­n of Engineers also raised objections.

In a letter to the UDA chairman, the SLEI has raised their objections against bringing new regulation­s hurriedly without giving adequate time for engineers to express their views on the final draft. .

The associatio­n welcomed the UDA’s recent action to review representa­tions made by profession­als, experts in the relevant filed, public interest activists and engineers.

The new regulation­s regarding land and building constructi­on coming under the control of the UDA are confusing, a leading public interest activist in this field lamented.

He noted that those UDA regulation­s in regard to land division plans are impractica­ble and there was a hidden agenda of such plans.

It is almost the same set of regulation­s which was rejected by the profession­als in 2019 under the previous government and it has resurfaced, he alleged.

This was an attempt to divide government and private- owned barren lands into blocks of lands countrywid­e in the country for real estate developmen­t and constructi­on of high- rise and other buildings, he disclosed.

In his letter, the public interest activist, who requested anonymity, stated that there are regulative provisions to execute agreements by the UDA and the National Physical Planning Department (NPPD).

These regulative provisions are applicable countrywid­e, he pointed out.

The UDA has made an attempt to become the one and only regulator while ignoring the available legal enactments to institutio­ns by introducin­g new regulation­s which will be gazetted soon, he warned.

The regulative clauses have been drafted without any prerequisi­tes, standards and checks and balances, he said adding that those are nothing but clear maximising “corruption” along with “legalising” unofficial corrupt practices.

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