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Slum Development / Housing

DDA unveils apartment exchange plan

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Indian Express         15.12.2010

DDA unveils apartment exchange plan

Mandakini Gahlot Tags : Delhi Development Authority apartment exchange scheme, DDA policy, Cooperative Grouping Housing Scheme exchange flats Posted: Wed Dec 15 2010, 01:59 hrs

New Delhi:  Every year, the Delhi Development Authority (DDA) gets inundated with requests from residents of the Cooperative Grouping Housing Scheme (CGHS), who want to exchange their flats for various reasons.

“The requests usually come from the elderly or persons suffering from ill-health, who prefer to reside on the ground floor. In most cases, the applicants would have already found someone in the society who is willing to exchange flats,” a DDA official explained. But as the Authority did not have a policy in place to process such requests, they were either handled on an individual basis or ignored.

The Authority has now introduced a new policy that would permit multiple and triangular (mutual exchange of flats amongst three residents) exchange within the same colony. According to the policy, if triangular or multiple exchange of flats takes place in the same category within one year of the draw of lots, the flatholder as well as the applicant would have to pay a sum of Rs 15,000. “Similarly if the exchange takes place after a year of the draw of lots, the parties would have to pay a sum of Rs 25,000 for the exchange to be processed.”

The onus of arranging for a mutual exchange lies completely on the applicant, and the DDA would not play any role in that process. In the event of an exchange of a lower category flat for a higher category flat within a year of the draw of lots, the flat owner and the applicant would have to pay Rs 35,000. The amount would go up to Rs 45,000 if the exchange takes place after the completion of a year. However, the DDA policy insists that only original allottees can indulge in flat exchanges. 

Among other things, applicants would be required to furnish a no-objection certificate from the society to ensure that third-party members do not have any problem with the exchange. The authority will not permit a second exchange of flats.

While mutual exchange of flats already exists in non-CGHS DDA societies, this is the first policy aimed at regularising such arrangements. “In DDA societies, where there are free-hold flats, the DDA does not get too involved in the exchange process. However, with CGHS houses, the official status of the house owner is that of a long-term lessee and, therefore, there is a need for a more organised system to regulate exchanges,” the DDA official said.

 

DDA sticks to previous draw process for housing scheme

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The Hindu  15.12.2010

DDA sticks to previous draw process for housing scheme

Staff Reporter

Authentication of application forms only after allotment

The first step in the draw process is completely manual

Three independent judges will select the first allottee by a draw of lots


NEW DELHI: The Delhi Development Authority is sticking to the same draw process and software for its 2010 Housing Scheme that it used in its previous 2008 Housing Scheme.

The Authority will be conducting authentication of submitted application forms only after the allotment of flats. At the time of submitting application forms, banks will only verify whether the application set is complete.

The data of applicants including their housing preference and the data on flats including the flat locations are fed as two independent lists into a computerised database. The two lists are shuffled so that both do not follow any set pattern after which the database will generate a new randomised number for each applicant.

The first step in the draw process is completely manual. Three independent judges who are not part of the DDA will select the first allottee by a draw of lots.

Since the DDA is expecting at least 10 lakh applications, the judges will pick up one lot each from seven baskets which will have ten lots numbered 0 to 9 to arrive at a seven-digit number. This number will be matched by the software with the list of randomised numbers of applicants.

If there is a match, the applicant's five housing preferences are matched against the list of flats available.

If the preferences marked are available, the flat is allotted to the applicant who will be the first successful allottee.

Then a computerised process kicks in to draw the next allottee.

If none of the applicant's housing preferences are available the process goes on to generate the next randomised applicant.

DDA spokesperson Neemo Dhar said that the system will keep track of the footprints of the computerised draw and each successive randomised number that is generated along with each applicant's details will be recorded.

She said the software and the algorithm used for generating each number has been verified and certified as tamper-proof by the National Informatics Centre and Centre for Development of Advanced Computing after controversies surfaced in the 2008 Housing Scheme.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 15 December 2010 07:12
 

CHB may get additional grant of Rs 99 crore for slum rehab project

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Indian Express   14.12.2010

CHB may get additional grant of Rs 99 crore for slum rehab project

Express News Service Tags : Chandigarh Housing Board grant, CHB, Union Ministry of Housing Posted: Tue Dec 14 2010, 05:05 hrs

 Chandigarh:  Officials to meet Housing Ministry’s Central Monitoring and Sanctioning Committee members in New Delhi

The Chandigarh Housing Board (CHB) is likely to get an additional grant of Rs 99 crore from the Union Ministry of Housing to fulfil the next phase of the slum rehabilitation project in the city. A meeting in this regard is scheduled between officials of the CHB and the Housing Ministry’s Central Monitoring and Sanctioning Committee at New Delhi.

Revealing the details, Chandigarh Housing Board Chairman Mohanjit Singh said, “We are hopeful of getting the grant from the Ministry on Tuesday. Once we get the requisite amount of money, the slum rehabilitation project will definitely pick up pace.”

The CHB has already requested the Chandigarh Administration to give a matching grant of another Rs 99 crore from the normal budgetary process so that the slum rehabilitation project can be carried out smoothly, without any major roadblocks.

The Chandigarh Housing Board ran into a severe financial crunch after the multi-crore Prideasia project hit a road block. CHB was to earn several hundred crore rupees from the project, which were to be pumped into the slum rehabilitation project, according to the original plan.

The Union government had planned to allocate a total of Rs 396 crore to the Chandigarh Housing Board for completing one phase of the slum rehabilitation project.

Under the slum rehabilitation scheme, inhabitants of various colonies and slums, which had come up as parts of encroachment on government land, are rehabilitated in the newly constructed flats in the southern sectors of the city.

Of the total amount, the CHB had already received Rs 233 crore, which were utilised in construction of flats under the slum rehabilitation project. The project, which is almost half way through, is yet to undertake construction of nearly 12,000 more flats under the scheme.

 


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