Ward Committees in Bengaluru come to life with budget allocation as part of MyCityMyBudget Phase 2

Bala Janaagraha IconMarch 28, 2022
Blog

Citizens present progress report on walkability improvements undertaken with funds allocated to ward committees.

Citizens from different wards of Bengaluru were joined by citizens across the nation to participate in Janaagraha’s #CityPolitics webinar titled ‘MyCityMyBudget Phase 2 – Are Ward Committees using budget allocated to them’ on Saturday to find out how Bengaluru Ward Committees are utilizing the budget allocated to them!

In August 2021, BBMP set precedence by allotting Rs 60 lakh to each of its 198 Ward Committees. The decision was taken after over 9,000 citizens’ submitted inputs in the #MyCityMyBudget campaign on how Ward budgets needed to be spent on improving walkability and public toilets by identifying yellow spots’

“After we received citizen budget inputs through the #MyCityMyBudget campaign we wanted to incentivize citizens to participate in their ward affairs by giving them a chance to decide. Citizens are the biggest stakeholders in ward development and maintenance. Citizens need to continuously engage with their urban local bodies to ensure ward development,” said BBMP Special Commissioner (Finance) Thulasi Maddineni IAS speaking at the webinar.

“Bengaluru has a reputation for active citizen participation. Allotting Rs 60 lakh to each of the ward committees was an act of faith in our citizens. Ward Committees are like Grama Sabhas and we now have regular meetings in most wards; just like grama sabhas, ward committees can be noisy but order comes out of the chaos,” she said. Maddineni is also nodal officer in charge of Ward 19 Sanjaya Nagar and presides over ward committee meetings in her ward.

Speaking on how the budget needs to be spent, Maddineni said, “Of the Rs 60 lakhs, 20L allotted to potholes has been used in October 2021, to speed up the work. The details on where the money is used are available with the Ward Engineer for the ward committee. With regard to Rs 20 lakh for footpaths, Janaagraha is taking up the Footpath Walkability Survey with citizens to help prioritise works. The work will be decided as per the input submitted by the citizens in the ward committee. BBMP is also maintaining close to 10,000 borewells. The 20 lakh is allotted for maintenance and repair and we wanted citizens to have the same in the same.”

“We are nearing the end of January. Citizens can submit their inputs in the ward committees, which will help us, decide where the work needs to be taken up and use the funds” Maddineni added.

Srinivas Alavilli, Head, Civic Participation, Janaagraha said, “Participatory democracy in urban areas has been restricted to academic discussions and largely remained wishful thinking but not anymore in Bengaluru. Today we heard from so many citizens how they worked together in their own ward committees and made concrete plans on how to use the 60L funds allocated to them. It is heartening to see active citizens from across India join this discussion. The BBMP is making great strides in institutionalizing citizen participation by conducting ward committee meetings and allocating funds to ward committees and I’m confident that this is a great beginning. We urge more citizens to get involved locally and taste the power of community engagement and ownership. It can be done and it must be done not just in Bengaluru but in every city of India “

 

Ward Walkability Survey in 5 focus wards and What Citizens have to say

To decide on the footpaths that need to be developed, Janaagraha has been working with Ward Committees as part of MCMB Phase II and in 5 wards have conducted a walkability survey in association with Jana Urban Space Foundation, Sensing Local and with the help of citizens.

The walkability of the ward has been measured across 4 broad footpath parametres – Accessibility, Connectivity, Safety and Comfort consisting of a total of 12 indicators. Both sides of the footpath were taken into account while assigning the score. Additionally, the quality of pedestrian walkabibility was measured over 5 indicators which primarily recorded the presence of footpaths and pedestrian crossings that enable ease across the road network. (The report for the area surveyed and results for each of the ward has been attached with the press note.)

In Banaswadi (Ward 27) a total of 9.5 kms was surveyed and the ward has received a Ward Walkability Score of 26 out of 100. Gottigere received a score of 17/100 and a total of 8.9 kms was surveyed. Sanjay Nagara has scored 2/100 for the 3.45 kilometers surveyed. R K Nagara (Ward 19) has scored 10/100 in 2.69 kilometres surveyed and Varthur (Ward 149) 0/100 for the 2.4 kms surveyed.

IMPORTANT: Please note that the score is reflective of the streets surveyed only and not the entire ward! 

The citizens who participated in the survey from the 5 focus wards shared insights during the #CityPolitics Webinar.

Amith Nigli and Christopher Cruz, representing Banasawadi (Ward 17) spoke about how they drew plans to identify vulnerable roads. Speaking on budget allocation, Christopher said “60 lakhs is negligible to start with. Yet, it is still something good to relay our hopes on!”  Amith Nigli said “unless we work together and understand how the system works, we cannot bring the change we all seek”

Speaking on the same issue, Swarupa Kakumanu and Poongothai from Gottigere (Ward 194) said that they made use of the walkability index to identify footpaths and roads that needed most attention. “Google forms were created for the collection of people’s opinions and the same were addressed while drafting a plan for civic works,”Poongothai said. Citizens appreciated the proactive nature of Nodal Officer Ms. Ramamani.  Swarupa Kakumanu said they made sure that voices of all sections of society were heard in their ward committee and bore wells funds were utilized in the right areas where there was a need.

The need of more funds for larger wards was addressed by Jagadish Reddy, Co-Founder Varthur Rising. “Varthuru (Ward 149) is a large ward. Thus, 60 lakhs are inadequate when it comes to repair and maintenance of assets. This is a great beginning but  we hope that BBMP will allocate more budget that can be utilized by citizens in our ward” he said. 

Geeta Gooty from Sanjayanagara (Ward 19) highlighted the importance of civic participation in the effective maintenance of a ward. “Citizen Participation is most vital in the improvement of an area. This must, of-course, be backed by the efforts of the officials and we are lucky to have Ms. Thulasi Maddineni as our Nodal officer” she said. 

Commenting on the ways to assess the requirements of the ward, Lalitha Mohan of Radhakrishna Temple (Ward 18) said, “We zeroed down on two factors with regard to footpaths – proximity to the neighborhood schools and the roads that are used often – the connecting roads. Based on this, we finalized where the work was needed to be done,.

Citizens from Ahmedabad, Mumbai, Bhubaneswar, Hyderabad and Chennai joined the discussion virtually and commended the efforts in Bengaluru to strengthen ward committees and wished to see similar initiatives in their cities as well.  Citizens from different parts of Bengaluru enthusiastically participated in the interaction and brought out many suggestions and highlighted the problems they face in their wards.

Online poll was conducted during the session – 100% of respondents opined that more citizens must participate in ward committees. 87% felt that BBMP should allocated more funds for footpaths. When asked about the biggest hurdles to ward committees, 42% said not taking actions based on ward committee decisions and 28% felt  not holding meetings regularly are the two big hurdles. The fact that only 28% highlighted meetings not be held conveys that more and more ward committee meetings are indeed happened and Janaagraha study in September 2021 showed that nearly 4000 ward committee meetings happened in our city between July 2020-August 2021! 

The Phase 2 of the MyCityMyBudget Campaign

MyCityMyBudget Phase II is the implementation phase where the vision of 1,000 km of walkable footpaths with at least 5 km of walkable footpaths per ward gets actualized. Janaagraha is aiming to facilitate the utilization of 20 lakh budgetary allocation (of the total 60 lakhs) towards improvement of footpaths through citizens, ward engineers and nodal officers. This phase will enable end-to-end citizen-led execution and supervision of the allocation of funds takes place. 

As part of MyCityMyBudget Phase 2, Janaagraha has been taking up orientation of the MCMB campaign goals to communities, providing walkability survey training to communities, execution of walkability survey through citizen participation in focus wards, cost estimation of surveyed footpaths with ward engineers, generating walkability score report, prioritizing road/segments for budget implementation by citizens in ward committee meeting, ward committee and citizens should submit plan to BBMP for implementation, Implementation of ward plan by the BBMP.

For Further Details:

Please Contact

  • Mahalakshmi B – 9986016557
  • Srinivas Alavilli – 9945402662

 

About Janaagraha

Janaagraha is a Bengaluru-based not-for-profit established in 2001 with the mission of transforming the quality of life in India’s cities and towns. Janaagraha has experience of two decades in urban policy and governance and has worked extensively across governments on administrative and legislative reforms to urban governance, including on constitutional amendment to 74th Constitution Amendment Act, on JnNURM, with Second Administrative Reforms Commission, XIII, XIV, and XV Finance Commissions, CAG of India, Planning Commission/NITI Aayog and Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs (MoHUA).    

    

Janaagraha powered blcares.in, BBMP’s platform that helped citizens connect with their Ward DETER Committees, provided helplines and information on Triage Centres, Primary Health Clinics and Hospitals and also enabled citizens to sign-up as volunteers and efficiently roll out the decentralised COVID-19 management approach. 

Post A New Comment

Your email address will not be published.

Subscribe To Our Newsletter

Sign up for our newsletter to stay up to date with the latest in active citizenship and urban governance reforms in India’s cities and towns.