Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Grievances related to civic issues declined since lockdown in Mumbai

- Pratip Acharya

MUMBAI: In a report by NGO Praja Foundation on the status of civic issues in Mumbai, it was revealed that the total number of complaints filed by citizens related to various civic-related issues in the city has dropped post-pandemic.

The data also states that while the number of grievances registered has seen a decline, the average time taken to solve them has increased. According to the data shared by the NGO, the BMC has recorded 9,45,156 complaints in the Centralise­d Complaint Registrati­on System (CCRS) between 2012 and 2021. The CCRS is the collective database that records citizens’ grievances from all the BMC portals including the 24/7 MYBMC app, My Pothole Fixit app, BMC

Whatsapp Chatbot, and the Citizen’s Grievance Cell - 1916.

Out of the 9.45 lakh complaints that were registered in the past ten years, 1.28 lakh complaints or 13.5% were registered in 2019 followed by 1.16 lakh complaints or 12.3% were registered in 2018. However, in 2020 only 93,774 civic complaints were addressed by citizens followed by 90,250 complaints in 2021. Furthermor­e, the data also stated that the number of days required to solve these issues rose from 30 days in 2019 to 39 days in 2020 to 48 days in 2021. The ward-wise analysis showed that the highest number of percapita complaints were registered from the A-ward (Marine Drive, Cuffe Parade) followed by D-ward (Malabar Hills, Kemp’s Corner) and C-ward (Bhuleshwar, Kalbadevi).

“The CCRS system began generating time taken to resolve complaints in 2017 when the average time was 48 days. It increased to 30 days in 2019 but increased back to 48 days in 2021. Complaints decreased from 1.28 lakhs in 2019 to 90,250 in 2021, which could be as citizens began to lose faith in BMC’S grievance redressal system,” said Yogesh Mishra, head of a dialogue programme in Praja.

“The data suggests that while the number of complaints in certain areas has declined in past few years, the number of complaints related to certain issues has also increased. This could be possible because citizens can now register to complain easily, the grievance registrati­on platform has improved and at the same time, the citizens may have lost faith in certain areas of the BMC,” said Milind Mhaske, CEO of the foundation.

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