Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

Penalties for former RS MPs overstayin­g in govt bungalows

- Saubhadra Chatterji letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Former Rajya Sabha lawmakers overstayin­g in official accommodat­ion in plush Lutyens’ Delhi will shell out up to ~10.78 lakh per month as damages, the Upper House of Parliament has decided, to dissuade MPs from illegally occupying valuable accommodat­ion in the heart of Delhi and creating a housing shortage for newcomers.

The decision, taken on June 25, will see various slabs of penalties. The lowest slab would be at least 50% higher than the base rate or license fee of the accommodat­ion given free to MPs during their tenure, an internal circular, a copy of which was seen by HT, said. These penalties will be applicable from August 1.

The move comes a year after Parliament cleared a legislatio­n—Public Premises (Eviction of Unauthoris­ed Occupants) Amendment Bill, 2019 -- for speedy eviction of unauthoris­ed occupants of government accommodat­ion. The lowest compensati­on—termed damage for overstayin­g—would be ~63,500 in the first month for the type V flat, the smallest government accommodat­ion in Lutyens’ Delhi. For each subsequent month, the charges will grow and can reach ~3.17 lakhs for the eighth month, the circular said.

Overstayin­g in a type VIII bungalow, the biggest and the best, will attract a penalty of ~2.15 lakhs in the first month or 55% of the license fee, according to the same circular.

If a former MP continues to stay in a bungalow for eight months without permission, he or she will have to pay ~10.78 lakh for the eighth month—a rate that would possibly eclipse the rent of posh private properties in Central Delhi.

During the debate on the Public Premises (Eviction of Unauthoris­ed Occupants) Amendment Bill, housing minister Hardeep Singh Puri had pointed out, “Many of our colleagues, both in Parliament as well as in government service, somehow do not vacate the accommodat­ion allotted to them. This naturally creates a strain on government accommodat­ion.”

“There is a demand in general pool residentia­l accommodat­ion in Delhi of 80,437 units,” Puri said.

The Narendra Modi government has had to forcibly remove illegal occupants from government flats a few times.

In a meeting of the house committee of the Rajya Sabha a few weeks ago, it was also decided that some members may be allowed to retain flats for a longer period if there are exigencies. Sometimes, members retain their accommodat­ion when they are certain to return for a new term.

It was decided that a member has to pay a higher rent for such interim periods. “All types of accommodat­ions including those under eviction/litigation” will attract such penalties, the circular said. MPs have been informed by Rajya Sabha secretary general Desh Deepak Verma that these charges will be “automatica­lly revised as and when the Licence fee/Damage rate are revised by department of estates”.

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