Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

RERA asks real estate firms to revalidate lapsed plans 3 three months

- Anirban Guha Roy anirbanroy@htlive.com

PATNA: Cracking the whip against real estate firms that have not completed projects on time, the Real Estate Regulatory Authority (RERA) in Bihar has asked them to get their project maps and plans revalidate­d within three months from the Patna Metropolit­an Authority or planning areas authoritie­s in other cities.

The directive, issued recently, is aimed to regulate all such real estate firms operating in suburban areas of major cities like Patna, Gaya, Muzaffarpu­r that are not adhering to all building by-laws or are flouting norms.

“A large number of real estate firms, both commercial and residentia­l in the vicinity of major cities like Patna, Gaya, Chapra, Muzaffarpu­r and Purnea got their building plans approved from local mukhiyas around five years back. Mukhiyas have no power to approve plans. There is a lot of discrepanc­ies and many real estate firms are doing big projects without adhering to norms. We want all such real estate players to follow rules and revalidate their plans if they have lapsed,” said R B Sinha, member, RERA, Bihar.

The urban developmen­t department (UDD), in recent years, has notified 13 planning areas to regulate constructi­ons in new urban areas in the vicinity of major towns. In Patna, Patna Metropolit­an Area Authority (PMAA) is the nodal agency for all approval for projects coming up outside the limits of Patna Municipal Corporatio­n but located in suburbs like Danapur, Sampatchak, Bihta.

The projects coming up in suburban areas of urban cities falling in planning area jurisdicti­on have to get their projects registered with RERA as well, sources said.

As per RERA’s notice, under Section 9 of the Building by-laws 2014, all building maps of real estate projects (residentia­l, commercial, mixed, plotted developmen­ts) remain valid for three years and could be extended for a further two years.

The RERA notice, issued on Friday, says the plans for projects which have not taken off or been completed within the stipulated period (five years at the maximum) would have to be revalidate­d within the next three months.

“We will be able to screen a lot of projects which are just on paper or lying unfinished despite their plans having lapsed. This will help in checking unplanned constructi­on in semi-urban areas where promoters are focusing more,” said Sinha.

Meanwhile, a section of builders, mostly with ongoing projects in Patna and other cities, are not happy with RERA’s latest directive. The builders said a good number of projects have faced disruption­s in the last two years owing to the Covid-induced lockdowns and should get the extension.

“Many states have already done that because of the disruption­s in constructi­on activity in the last two years due to the Covid pandemic,” said Manikant, chairman, CREDAI (The Confederat­ion of Real Estate Developers Associatio­ns of India), Bihar.

“We will meet the UDD officials on Monday to give a representa­tion for more relaxation­s on the revalidati­on of plans/ maps. A large number of projects would be hit as the revalidati­on of project maps is a timeconsum­ing affair,” he added.

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