Hindustan Times (Noida)

Focus on illegal colonies in master plan ’41

- Risha Chitlangia Risha.chitlangia@htlive.com

NEWDELHI: The Master Plan of Delhi-2041 will finally address the capital’s biggest concern — regulating unauthoris­ed colonies. The National Institute of Urban Affairs (NIUA), which is preparing the plan, has started deliberati­ons on how to bring these colonies under the planning ambit.

Bringing unregulate­d urban sprawls under the planning domain was one of the key issues flagged by urban developmen­t experts from India and abroad at the consultati­on event on Master Plan-2041 organised by the NIUA and the Delhi Developmen­t Authority (DDA) on Tuesday.

Delhi lieutenant governor Anil Baijal said, “Brownfield developmen­t is the way forward and amalgamati­on of plots, and transit-oriented developmen­t should be considered while redevelopi­ng in-built environmen­t.”

With nearly one-thirds of the Delhi’s population (nearly 60 lakh) living in these colonies, urban planners say the road map for future developmen­t can’t be complete till a plan is put in place to regulate and redevelop them.

The master plan is the blueprint for urban developmen­t that lays down guidelines on how and where Delhi builds homes, offices, schools and industrial zones.

Jagan Shah, NIUA director, said, “People in unauthoris­ed colonies are looked upon as encroacher­s. But as we plan for the future developmen­t, they can’t be ignored. The MPD-2041 will address the issue of unauthoris­ed colonies and how we can redevelop them to provide basic amenities such as schools, hospital, etc. We have started a discussion on the matter.”

Pedro B Ortiz, senior fellow, Marron Institute of Urban Management, New York University, said informal or unregulate­d settlement­s are a problem the world over and cities have to provide land for the influx of people coming in search of jobs. “People are going to come to the cities and you can’t prevent it. If you don’t provide land to them, they are going to be uncontroll­ed in informal settlement­s. It is the government’s duty to provide that land.”

In Delhi, while the number of unauthoris­ed colonies has increased over the years, these have been kept out of the urban planning ambit. In the Master Plan of Delhi-2021, notified in February 2007 and valid till 2021, the state government and the Centre were supposed to prepare a plan for the developmen­t of unauthoris­ed colonies along with special areas and rural villages.

While the Centre sought time to prepare a plan for these areas, developmen­t is protected under the Delhi Laws (Special Provisions) Act, which was first introduced in 2007 and extended annually. The protection under the Act was last revised in 2017 and extended till December 2020.

DDA and urban planners say it is about time to address the issue. “These colonies are an integral part of Delhi and we can’t ignore them. It has been decided to make detailed provisions to provide essential infrastruc­ture in these colonies and prepare a plan for redevelopm­ent,” DDA vicechairm­an Tarun Kapoor said.

Though the deliberati­ons are in the initial stages, Shah said there is a need to incentives to people in these areas to provide civic and social infrastruc­ture.

The regularisa­tion of such colonies—the number increased from 1,218 in 2008 to 1,797—has been hanging fire for the past 12 years. The Bjp-led central government and the AAP government in Delhi are at loggerhead­s over regularisa­tion and blame each other for the delay.

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