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Risking lives for additional revenue?

Earning revenue from unauthorised buildings ‘unethical’

Updated on: Jan 20, 2014 05:36 PM IST
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Many housing experts feel that the issue of earning revenues from unauthorised buildings is unethical and that the government should give serious thought to the issue of risk of lives in such structures from fires, natural calamities such as earthquakes or from structural faults.

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According to experts, the situation is extremely grim in unauthorised and illegal colonies where unchecked construction is taking place by private developers who pay no heed to afety norms.

Chandan Ghosh, professor and head of the geo-hazard risk management division, NDMI, says, “Had the government taken any lessons from the Lalita Park tragedy (in which 73 people died in a building collapse) the mushrooming of thousands of unsafe houses could have been stopped in the last three years. People don’t know that adherence to safety norms will increase the cost of construction by just 10%. Secondly, in the last three years, MCD has empanelled more than 60 structural safety engineers who are competent to certify the safety of the buildings. Even then illegal construction is rampant - especially in the unauthorised and illegal colonies.”

No safe building certificate? Pay a fine of just R200 and then R10 per day from the date of possession

Taking physical possession of a housing unit without a completion certificate? This document, which assures you of the structure’s safety, is not very important for the government. Failing to produce the certificate attracts a paltry fine from the Delhi Municipal Corporations of `200 and subsequently `10 a day from the date of possession. What’s more surprising is that civic agencies do not want to stop people from taking possession of their homes without a formal certification of completion. They allege that their officials face legal problems if they insist on a certificate.

“Municipal corporations are already short-staffed. If we issue one challan to a home owner for not having a completion certificate, I have to depute a person to handle that matter in the court. There are lakhs of people who violate rules in Delhi and if we start issuing challans to all of them, all our of MCD staff will be making an appearance in court,” says a senior MCD official.

Legal experts feel that the violation should be strictly dealt with and negligence of building safety standards should invite a very heavy fine. “If the government makes it a criminal offence or imposes a heavy penalty on people who do not have the certificate, at least people will not violate building bylaws so easily. But at the same time, the mechanism to expedite completion certificate should also be made simple and easy otherwise this will lead to more corruption. I think spreading awareness about structural safety is also a very important aspect of safe living,” says Jasbir Singh Malik, a SC advocate.

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Jeevan Prakash Sharma

Jeevan Prakash Sharma is assistant editor, Special Assignment. He has spent nearly 20 years in journalism with focus on education, real estate, crime and legal . He specialises in RTI-based information and open source data.

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