Business Standard

Sloppy start to Rera

Almost half the states yet to notify rules, while others have watered down provisions of the central Act

- ABHINEET KUMAR

As it comes into effect from today, almost half the states are yet to notify rules, while others have watered down the provisions of the Act. ABHINEET KUMAR writes

States have been half-hearted in their efforts to implement the Real Estate (Regulation and Developmen­t) Act, 2016, (Rera), a year after the central law was officially notified following a seven-year long passage through Parliament. The law comes into force on Monday.

Research by real estate consultanc­y CBRE shows 13 out of 28 states and Union Territorie­s (UTs) are yet to publish draft rules. In eight states draft rules have been published but these have not been finalised yet. In only seven states rules have been finalised and notified. One state, Jammu & Kashmir, is out of the preview of Rera.

Rera being a central Act, it does not need to be notified by states. However, land being a state matter, various operationa­l rules and clauses for implementi­ng the Act are to be formulated and notified by state government­s. Each state has to appoint regulatory authoritie­s to oversee implementa­tion of the Act. A scan of the evolving regulatory regime shows though states have broadly adopted the provisions of the central law, many have taken recourse to dilutions in some of the clauses.

Maharashtr­a, a key market for realestate projects, has taken the lead in Rera implementa­tion, notifying rules and establishi­ng an authority, but it has watered down the law. For instance, the state has introduced a new nomenclatu­re called “proposed plans” in the rules. In effect, it means developers in the state can submit their “proposed plan” to the regulatory authority. Some real estate experts fear that this may allow developers to market the “proposed plan” to unsuspecti­ng buyers, who may not have access to changes in sanctioned plans. Under the central Act, developers can submit only sanctioned plans to the regulator.

The state rules also provide discretion­ary power to the authority to withhold any informatio­n or document from being uploaded on its website for public viewing. This again is a departure from the central Act.

In Gujarat, a state that has finalised and notified the rules, Rera will not have retrospect­ive effect. It will only cover projects launched after November 1, 2016.

The central Act defines “ongoing projects” as ones where developmen­t is going on and for which the completion certificat­ion has not been issued. However, Uttar Pradesh has introduced some riders to this clause that work in favour of developers. The rules allow exclusion of ongoing projects from the ambit of the new law where the developer has filed an applicatio­n with the authority for issue of completion certificat­e, or where the services have been handed over the local authority for maintenanc­e, among others.

The rules for five UTs, where there are no local Assemblies, were framed by the Ministry of Housing and Urban Poverty Alleviatio­n, headed by Venkaiah Naidu. These rules are largely in sync with the central Act.

However, the draft Rera rules for Delhi, which are yet to be notified, have been framed by the Ministry of Urban Developmen­t, another ministry headed by Naidu. A few of the draft rules in Delhi are in deviation from what the Ministry of Housing and Urban Poverty Alleviatio­n notified. For instance, the draft Delhi rules say that a developer will have to provide details of only those legal cases that have been disposed off, and not those pending adjudicati­on in various courts. This is in contradict­ion to Section 4 (2) (b) of the Act, which clearly provides for informatio­n to be given with regard to details of cases pending.

Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan have copied draft real estate rules provided by the central government in June 2016. The rules were later finalised and notified by the Ministry of Housing and Urban Poverty Alleviatio­n on October 31, 2016. But these two states have not updated their rules in line with the final central Act.

“There are states that have notified rules that are contrary to provisions of the Rera Act,” says Abhay Upadhyay, national convener for the Fight for Rera, a pressure group that has been campaignin­g for Rera’s implementa­tion.

Some of these state-level implementa­tion concerns have now been taken up by the Committee on Subordinat­e Legislatio­n of the Lok Sabha as well as the Rajya Sabha, following a petition by Fight for Rera.

Neerav Merchant, partner at Mumbai-based corporate law firm Majmudar & Partners, says if the committee in its report concludes that there is a case of states watering down the central Act through their rules, then there is a clear case for public interest litigation.

“Rera is not magic, but a gradual process. It will take time before consumers can expect genuine redressal of their grievances,” says Gulam Zia, executive director, advisory, Knight Frank India.

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