The merger of villages within the
jurisdiction of Pune Municipal Corporation has raised many eyebrows. With the
approval of the merger, the Pune Municipal Corporation would surpass the size
of its neighboring financial capital Mumbai (post the merger the area of PMC
will be 500 sq kms as compared to BMC’s area of 480.25 sq kms). With the
decision to expand has also come the increasing apprehension over the
governance of the city. With rising populations and increasing size of
agglomeration, the question of the governance of the expanding metro cities
cannot be avoided further.
The immediate neighbor of Pune
City, which is the Pimpri Chinchwad Municipal Corporation, has also expanded
itself over the years and it is necessary to create a bridge between the two
corporations for an integrated development approach. Together the PMC and PCMC
along with other municipal councils, cantonment boards and villages would form
the Pune Metropolitan Region. There is an inclination in the air towards the
formation of the Pune Metropolitan Regional Development Authority (PMRDA) on
the lines of Mumbai’s Mumbai Metropolitan Regional Development Authority
(MMRDA).
Our constitution has made
provisions for such situations with the 74th Amendment Act, 1992. So
what does the Act say? Under the Article 243ZE, a Metropolitan Planning
Committee (MPC) should be constituted for a Metropolitan Area. The Metropolitan
Planning Committee would consist of not less than two-third of its members who
are elected members of Municipalities and Chairpersons of the Panchayat. This
Committee is responsible for the preparation of the development plan region. So
it is clear that, the MPC is a representative platform that falls above the
local bodies in the hierarchical structure.
India already has 6 major metro
cities in place, namely, Delhi, Mumbai, Hyderabad, Kolkata, Bangalore and
Chennai. As per the Constitution, the six metro cities should have an MPC in
place. So what is the situation on ground? All the six metros have formed
Development Authorities which are State level parastatal agencies and not MPCs.
Some of them were formed even before the 74th Amendment.
City
|
Development Authority
|
Year of formation of Development Authority
|
Status of Metropolitan Planning Committee
|
Delhi
|
Delhi Development Authority
|
1957
|
Status not known
|
Bangalore
|
Bangalore Development Authority
|
1976
|
The enabling law has been passed in the Karnataka
government. But MPC has not been constituted
|
Hyderabad
|
Hyderabad Metropolitan Development Authority
|
2008
|
The AP government envisaged the Metropolitan
Planning Committees
Act, 2007. However in April 2008, it formed the Hyderabad
Metropolitan Development Authority which is an extension of the state government
and plays a dominant role in the region.
|
Kolkata
|
Kolkata Metropolitan Development Authority
|
1979
|
It set up a MPC in 1998. The Kolkata Metropolitan
Development Authority (KMDA) has emerged as the administrative and technical secretariat
for the KMPC
|
Mumbai
|
Mumbai Metropolitan Regional Development
Authority
|
1975
|
MPC has been set on 17th December 2008,
but MMRDA still acts as the dominant agency
|
Chennai
|
Chennai Metropolitan Development Authority
|
1972
|
Enabling Act is drafted but MPC not formed.
|
It can be seen that except for
Kolkata, none of the six metros have progressed towards a functional MPC. The
consequence of which is that Urban Planning which is essentially the function
of a representative local body has been encroached by a non-representative
parastatal body making the process of planning more encrypted and
non-transparent. The development authorities functioning in the areas have
become so powerful that the major decisions about the city are being taken by
them. One of the reasons for the non-formation of the MPC, has been the highly
influential and powerful nature of the Development Authorities that they have
acquired over these years and dissolving such a body would create political and
administrative conundrums which is not appealing to the government.
Another characteristic of such a
structure of governance is the similar financial model adopted by the
Development Authorities. Being parastatal bodies, the Development Authorities
do not have access to collection of taxes and create a revenue base. So what
has been the reason for the financial might of the Development Authorities? The
answer is land assets. A huge amount of land resources have been transferred by
the state to the Development Authorities which has led to an over whelming flow
of revenue through land leasing and land sale activity. This kind of financing has
its own merits and demerits; the merit being that lump sum money is available
for undertaking development activities and the demerit being that the
Development Authorities have started behaving like real estate developers
aiming to make profits and forgetting their role as a welfare state. On account
of being a non-representative platform, there is high chance of regional
development not being regional in the true sense, with development being skewed
only to certain areas where the land prices are high.
What would happen to Pune
Metropolitan Region is still uncertain. The current atmosphere is of binary
nature where one group proposes for more decentralization by disagreeing on
further mergers, while the other proposes the formation of a Metropolitan
Development Authority that would act as a parent to the local bodies within the
Metropolitan Area.