The Times of India 20.11.2014
3 years after getting notices, 243 illegal Coimbatore buildings still in use
COIMBATORE:
Three years after they were sent notices for not having mandatory
approval documents, 243 illegal buildings in the city continue to be in
use and no action has been taken by the local planning authority.
In February 2011, the local planning authority (LPA) identified 177
educational institutions and 107 residential and commercial buildings in
the city that were constructed without mandatory building approval
documents. The list includes hospitals, banks, industries, colleges and
schools. Many well-known residential complexes in the city remain
unapproved, said a senior LPA official. The building owners neither
responded to the notices nor did LPA officials take further action.
Buildings over 4000 sq ft within the city limits have to get approval
from LPA.
LPA is in the midst of a drive to identify buildings
with deviations from the approved plan and will be issuing notices to 47
gated communities and group development projects in the city within a
week. The drive comes in the wake of building collapse in Chennai in
June in which 61 workers died.
LPA authorities said most plans
they receive are rejected. “Of the 30 to 40 plans that reach us every
month, only five or six get approval, but many builders go ahead with
the projects, paying scant regard to LPA rules and approval,” said an
official. Every inspection reveals at least five unapproved buildings,
the source added.
Of the showcause notices issued to 284
buildings in 2011, 27 buildings owners applied for approval and 15 had
submitted building proposals. Eight buildings were constructed on
agricultural land without getting land conversion documents from
district collector and directorate of town and country planning (DTCP).
According to a government order in January 2011, the district collector
has to visit the spot and submit a report to the DTCP office, which
takes a decision.
The primary defaulters were found to be
educational institutions, which usually do not pay the one-time
infrastructure and amenities fee that is fixed at Rs 285 a sqm. “Since
most college campuses are over 1 lakh sq ft, the fee is quite high and
they do not pay it and get approval,” said an official. The colleges
apply to All India Council for Technical Education or Medical Council of
India for conditional operation, stating they would get building
approval soon.
DTCP officials said strict action is not taken
against colleges as students’ education is at stake. “If we seal
colleges, where will the students go?” said the official.
LPA
officials say they have not taken action because they do not have enough
staff. “For such a big city, we have only 24 staff in the office. There
is no separate eviction or inspection wing. We do as much we can,” said
C Mathivanan, member secretary, LPA, Coimbatore. “People should check
the documents thoroughly before buying property.”
Builders
suggested computerization of the process. “LPA should approve building
plans online to reduce delays and make the system transparent,” said a
builder.