Business Standard

New normal: Covid gives space to urban bodies to run cities

- SUBHOMOY BHATTACHAR­JEE

Tukaram Mundhe, the municipal commission­er of Nagpur in Maharashtr­a, sits in a war room every day with his medical officials to track measures to block the spread of the contagion in the city. Nagpur has opted for institutio­nal quarantine for anyone who tests positive. That means greater monitoring.

“We did it in March itself when we found it impossible to keep people indoors. Placing them in our care has broken the chain of transmissi­on, though the Indian Council of Medical Research guidelines only asked for home quarantine,” says Mundhe. The city has managed to keep case fatalities below the national average.

The same camaraderi­e is, however, missing in Hyderabad.

The Greater Hyderabad Municipal Corporatio­n has threatened to disengage from Covid19 management in the city. It has said the state health department has not kept it in the loop about the number of cases on a daily basis, leaving the corporatio­n clueless about who to monitor.

Cities are setting the rules that now carry life and death implicatio­ns for their residents, during this pandemic. Whether it is Nagpur, Hyderabad or Delhi, most of those rules are sought to be set by the municipal authoritie­s, who have never wielded such powers before.

Indian Administra­tive Service (IAS) officers, for instance, make it a point to stay away from being posted in the city administra­tions, except as municipal commission­ers. This in contrast to rural areas, where the equivalent district magistrate (DM) is an IAS, but his deputies — sub-divisional officers — are also from the service.

“Not surprising,” says O P Agarwal, chief executive officerInd­ia of World Resources Institute, adding, “Unlike municipali­ties, DMS are part of the state government­s and have, therefore, much wider powers.”

Covid-19 has substantia­lly changed this pecking order. One of those was in view in May. Cabinet Secretary Rajiv Gauba met 13 municipal commission­ers and DMS of the worst-affected cities. It was unpreceden­ted. In the rank-conscious Indian bureaucrac­y, these commission­ers occupy slots several rungs below Gauba. In the normal course, they are supposed to report only to their respective state leadership where the Centre has no role.

But it is not a usual time by any means. While the meeting was also attended by chief secretarie­s of each state government, they were there to answer for the gaps in demands made by the commission­ers.

India is still a long way from its cities getting their rightful share of power as the third tier of government. Temporaril­y though, among many other things that Covid-19 has brought on, is an enhanced role for the city bosses.

Will the current episode make these enhanced roles persist within the municipal administra­tions? “Covid-19 will certainly make these bodies rethink their role in managing cities,” says Pushpa Pathak, senior visiting Fellow at the Centre for Policy Research (CPR).

Pathak, who has also worked with the World Bank and the National Institute of Urban Affairs, is however, doubtful if this will lead to meaningful reforms. “There is a kind of rigidity in the urban sector. The state government­s are not willing to give more authority and autonomy to (them)…functional devolution has not been accompanie­d with comparable financial devolution,” says Pathak.

To get some of those reforms to stick, some of the municipal bosses met the chairman of another equally powerful institutio­n, the 15th Finance Commission, N K Singh, in June. Going by the releases issued by the commission, many have forcefully put their points of being shortchang­ed by the states.

No state has set up state-level finance commission­s in time to make more funds available to the third tier. In Uttar Pradesh, of the 18 functions slated to be devolved to the urban bodies, only eight have come to them.

“There was lack of cooperatio­n from the state government officials in releasing informatio­n to the (state finance) commission for organisati­on of data as required, and also there was undue administra­tive interferen­ce from the government officials,” notes a release issued by the 15th Finance Commission.

In Rajasthan, “water supply function is partially devolved and urban planning is yet to be devolved… The accountabi­lity mechanism and financial reporting of the urban local bodies in the state continue to be weak”. As much as ~1,652 crore held by these bodies is lying with banks, Singh’s team has found out.

The lack of accountabi­lity has impacted the fight against the disease as well. About Delhi, Partha Mukhopadhy­ay, one of India’s foremost analysts of the urban sector, says, “On the disease, there has been less effectiven­ess, largely because the kind of infrastruc­ture needed for doing this is not within the city’s control. Currently, contact tracing is done via a medley of workers in the DM’S office, once the hospital informs the DM.”

Mukhopadhy­ay, who is senior research Fellow at CPR, explains that given the caseload Delhi is generating (it had reported 83,077 cases on June 29), the city administra­tion needed much more investment in informatio­n technology (IT) systems than it has now. The Delhi government’s IT department website was last updated two years ago. It is long overdue. One of the plans the Centre had laid out in more peaceful times was the Smart Cities Mission. The plan, written out in 2018, sought to empower local bodies to raise their own revenue, and also laid emphasis on their capacity building.

Mundhe says when he arrived in Nagpur, the city had less than 100 ICU beds to cater to a population of 4.5 million (of the city plus the adjacent rural areas). His first priority was to ramp up this capacity. He had an escape route because of the Epidemic Diseases Act, 1897. He has got around the felt absence of powers by using the provisions of the Act. “It gives wide ranging powers to the municipal corporatio­ns to do whatever is needed in such times,” says Mundhe. Finance was drawn from the State Disaster Relief Fund and cajoling the state administra­tion in Mumbai.

But not every city was able to do it. Hyderabad has cited lack of money. Delhi has enough to spare. The state government has an annual budget of ~60,000 crore, but lack of accountabi­lity between it and the three municipal corporatio­ns left gaping holes in the management of the pandemic. It was used by Union Home Minister Amit Shah to walk in with a more hands-on role. Mukhopadhy­ay says the example could create a narrative that the cities cannot be relied upon.

“The city failed. Who is going to give it more responsibi­lity? This will unfortunat­ely be the narrative, though the city should be much more empowered if we are to have localised responses.” Agarwal also agrees. “The special powers available to them now is unlikely to be willingly shared by the states, when the crisis blows over, which is a pity.” Yet, so long as the pandemic persists, it could become the new normal.

Cities are setting the rules that now carry life and death implicatio­ns for their residents. Most of these rules are sought to be set by municipal authoritie­s, that have never wielded such powers before

 ?? PHOTO: PTI ?? A healthcare worker takes a sample from a woman for Covid-19 test, in Ahmedabad on Wednesday
PHOTO: PTI A healthcare worker takes a sample from a woman for Covid-19 test, in Ahmedabad on Wednesday

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