The Indian Express 26.11.2013
Slums ignored in BMC’s new development plan
While over 60 per cent of the city’s population lives in slums, the
Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation’s draft Development Plan (DP) for the
next 20 years seems to have left out these areas in its planning
process.
Areas and slums falling under the Mumbai Metropolitan Region
Development Authority (MMRDA) and the Special Planning Authorities (SPA)
such as the Maharashtra Industrial Development Corporation (MIDC), have
been left out of the planning process. Some of the areas which come
under SPAs include Dharavi, one of the biggest slum clusters in the
city, along with business districts like Oshiwara, Backbay and SEEPZ.
“The notified areas under the special planning areas and MMRDA
and other agencies are not under the purview of DP 2014-34. These
account for an area of 4,322.79 hectare as per the existing land use.
Population and areas under SPAs have been computed and discounted for
purpose of analysis and further projection,” the report says.
A draft report of the DP (2014-34) has revealed that 63 per cent
of Mumbai’s housing stock comprises slums, chawls and pavement
dwellings and more than 60 per cent Mumbaikars live in houses which are
less than 650 sq ft. In its preparatory studies for the DP, the BMC had
showed that a majority of its housing options lie in slums (45 per
cent), chawls (15 per cent) and on pavements (three per cent).
The report further says only 28 per cent of the housing stock
falls under apartments, while nine per cent is public housing, including
slum rehabilitation schemes.
The 280-page “preparatory studies” report, jointly drafted by BMC
and Group SCE India Ltd, a 100 per cent subsidiary of the French
consulting firm EGIS Geoplan, was submitted to Chief Minister Prithviraj
Chavan recently. The preparatory studies compares the existing DP
(1991-2013) with the actual implementation and suggests future
projections.
Raising concerns over the exclusion of slums and its population in
the future development plan, Pankaj Joshi, executive director of the
Urban Design Research Institute, said: “While slums and the population
continue to exert pressure on the city’s infrastructure, the BMC has
failed to analyse the slums pockets in the DP. There is no strategy
which has been recommended to incorporate holistic development of slums
and special planning areas in the DP.”
He said while the BMC has agreed that a major chunk of the
population is involved in informal livelihoods in the analysis, no
strategy has been envisaged for the informal employment sector.