1 / 41

Kalaignar Housing Scheme

Kalaignar Housing Scheme. K.Ashok Vardhan Shetty, IAS Principal Secretary to Govt., Municipal Administration & Water Supply Department Tamil Nadu 29.9.2010. Census Definitions. Permanent Houses – both walls & roof made of permanent materials.

ouida
Télécharger la présentation

Kalaignar Housing Scheme

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Kalaignar Housing Scheme K.Ashok Vardhan Shetty, IAS Principal Secretary to Govt., Municipal Administration & Water Supply Department Tamil Nadu 29.9.2010

  2. Census Definitions • Permanent Houses – both walls & roof made of permanent materials. • e.g. Walls made of burnt bricks, stone, concrete, etc., • Roof made of tiles, concrete, G.I., metal, Asbestos sheets, etc. • Temporary Houses – both walls & roof made of temporary materials. • e.g. Walls made of mud, unburnt bricks, plastic, bamboo, etc., • Roof made of thatch, bamboo, wood, mud, plastic, etc. • Semi-permanent Houses – either wall or roof made of temporary materials, and the other made of permanent materials

  3. Temporary Houses in Tamil Nadu – Census 2001 • 23% of households in Tamil Nadu live in temporary houses • All India average – 18% • Rural TN – 33% (1/3rd) • Urban TN – 10% (1/10th)

  4. Huts in Rural Tamil Nadu • Estimate of number of Huts to be replaced • Census 2001 figures • Less IAY Allocations • Add for natural growth rate • 21 Lakhs, over a six-year period under State funds

  5. A Hut-free Tamil Nadu • Should selection of beneficiary depend on BPL Status (like IAY), OR • Status of Housing? • Estimate of Huts, OR • Enumeration of all Huts? • Allocation to all Village Panchayats, covering one-sixth of the Huts, OR • Allocation to one-sixth of the Village Panchayats each year, covering all the huts in these Village Panchayats

  6. A Hut-free Tamil Nadu (contd.) • Selection of beneficiary – by the Grama Sabha, OR Formula-based?

  7. IndiraAwaasYojanaAllocation to Tamil Nadu • Relying upon IAY alone will take over 30 Years to clear the backlog.

  8. Kalaignar Housing Scheme • In addition to IAY, and much larger in scope and scale. • Tamil Nadu – the first hut-free State in the country by 2016. • By far the largest State-funded Scheme, with an outlay of Rs.2,250 crores. • 2nd largest Scheme implemented by the State, next only to MGNREGS-TN with a labour budget of Rs.2900 crores.

  9. Kalaignar Housing Scheme (contd.) • Replacing all Huts with Thatched Roof, irrespective of the type of the wall, with permanent houses over a 6-year period, 2011-16. • Only huts with proper title. • In situ construction. • Alternative sites also provided. • About 200 square feet, RCC roof, and separate toilet – Rs.75,000 unit cost. • 3 lakh houses in 2010-11: Budgetary provision of Rs.2,250 crore.

  10. Enumeration of all Huts • Need to freeze number and list of huts as on the cut-off date (1.1.2010). • Pilot Survey conducted @ one Village Panchayat per Block (385 Blocks) in the State. • Main Survey in all Village Panchayats in the State. • Conducted during April – May, 2010.

  11. Enumeration of all Huts (contd.) • 3-member Enumeration Team, comprised of: • Village Administrative Officer; • Makkal Nala Paniyalar; and • Village Panchayat Assistant. • Enumeration as a ‘team’, not individually. • 3-member team mandatory. • Super-checking Official: Deputy BDO / Deputy Tahsildar.

  12. Enumeration of all Huts (contd.) • Intensive cascaded training • State level : Collectors, District Revenue Officers, Project Directors, DRDA. • District level : Deputy Collectors, Assistant Directors, Tahsildars, BDOs as Master Trainers. • Block level : Enumeration Teams and Super-checking officials.

  13. Enumeration of all Huts (contd.) • Enumeration Register capturing • Details about the Household. • Details about the Hut. • Details about the House-site. • Signature of the resident taken. • Eligibility determined and recorded by the Enumeration Team, Super-checking Official independently.

  14. Eligibility Criteria • Based on Ownership of land, and availability of ‘Identifiers’. • Land: Clear Title, Questionable Title, Land belonging to religious institutions, Unobjectionable Poramboke Land, Objectionable Poramboke Land. • Identifiers: Part No. & Serial No. in the May 2009 Parliamentary Electoral Roll, Ration ard number, TNEB Service Connection Number, House Tax Assessment Number.

  15. Eligibility Criteria (contd) • Huts classified as • Eligible • Conditionally Eligible • Ineligible • Determined by Enumeration Team. • Independently determined by Super-checking Official. • Finally determined by Software.

  16. Enumeration Results • Total No. of Huts enumerated 22.08 lakhs

  17. Enumeration Results

  18. Enumeration ResultsNo. of Huts enumerated in each District(10 Districts with more than 1 lakh huts each)

  19. Enumeration ResultsNo. of Huts enumerated in each District(10 Districts with 25 thousand -1 lakh huts each)

  20. Enumeration ResultsNo. of Huts enumerated in each District(11 Districts with less than 25 thousand huts each)

  21. 2nd round of Field Verification • Photograph of every hut with the resident standing in front, holding a board containing a new door number and serial number in the Enumeration Register. • Photograph affixed on software-generated Application-cum-Verification form, and signature of resident taken.

  22. Role of Information Technology • Web-based Software developed by NIC. • Stage 1: All entries from the Enumeration Registers entered into the KHS Database. • Distributed web-based data entry from 385 Blocks. • Stage 2: Onscreen Comparison and Confirmation, to ensure that the Database is an exact replica of the Enumeration Registers

  23. Role of Information Technology (contd.) • Generation of Application-cum-Verification Forms for 2nd Round of Field Visits. • Generation of list of beneficiaries. • Generation of individual work orders. • Generation of lists of huts for follow-up action, like issue of pattas etc.

  24. Allocation of Permanent Houses • To each Village Panchayat: a fixed component of 10 huts, plus a variable component in proportion to number of Eligible Huts. • So that ‘smaller’ Village Panchayats can be covered completely in the first year itself.

  25. Allocation of Permanent Houses (contd.) • Within each Village Panchayat : Sub-allocation to each Community (ST,SC,MBC,BC,OC) in proportion to the number of Eligible Huts. • To ensure inter-Community equity. • IAY: 60% of Houses allotted to SCs/STs, causing heart-burn to non-SC/STs.

  26. Allocation of Permanent Houses (contd.) • Within each Community : Habitations arranged in descending order of number of Eligible Huts of the Community, and sub-allocation of permanent houses done. • To ensure certainty and transparency in the priority of selection. • Systematic coverage of the ‘larger’ habitations, for greater impact and ease of implementation.

  27. Selection of Beneficiaries • Within each Habitation : A simple, fair, transparent and automatic process for selection of beneficiaries. • Beneficiaries selected in ascending order of new door number as per the May 2009 Parliamentary Electoral Roll. • Selection of all 3 lakh beneficiaries done using the Software specially developed by NIC.

  28. Issue of Work Orders • List of Eligible Huts generated by the Software, and placed before Grama Sabha for information on 15.8.2010 and 22.8.2010. • Work Orders generated by the Software, and issued to the beneficiaries from 26.8.2010.

  29. Construction of Houses • Cement, Steel– supplied Departmentally. • Bricks • co-ordinated by Collectors. • Firm orders – lead to reduced prices. • Additional Brick Kilns by SHGs. • Sand • Additional Quarries opened in each Block exclusively for the Scheme.

  30. Construction of Houses (contd.) • Masons • Mason apprentices trained under various Schemes. • Measurements taken by Overseers (Basement, Lintel level, Roof Laid stage and upon Completion) • Payments done to beneficiaries’ Bank Accounts by the Village Panchayats.

  31. The Next Steps • Issue of Eligibility card to all Eligible Huts to be covered over the next 5 years • Huts put up on Government poramboke lands – House site as well as permanent house to be allotted

  32. Thank You

More Related