Activists
say that implementing the model building bylaws would mean self-regulation
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Realty
rules:The State is now framing rules for the Real Estate Regulatory Authority
Act, which the realty sector argues, will ensure enforcement of building
bylaws.— FILE PHOTo
|
A possible move to exempt large realty
projects from scrutiny for environment clearance by the State-level Environment
Impact Assessment Authority (SEIAA) has incensed green activists, who claim
that this would virtually mean “self-regulation.”
The realty sector in the city is
intensely lobbying with the State government to adopt the model building bylaws
recently approved by the Union Cabinet that incorporate green norms in the
bylaws. If the State does so, large realty projects will be exempted from scrutiny
by SEIAA.
The move has run into virulent
opposition from environmentalists, who say self-regulation has never worked in
the city. “The biggest violation in the city has been of building bylaws…there
is a complete absence of enforcement. The violations are so huge that the
government wants to regularise them through Akrama-Sakrama. So if these large
projects violate green norms, damaging the fragile ecosystem, will they also be
regularised at a later date?” asked water activist Kshitij Urs.
Sridhar Pabbisetty, CEO of Namma
Bengaluru Foundation, one of the petitioners in the Agara-Bellandur wetland
case, said in that case, even with SEIAA presence, the wetlands were under
threat. He opined that a carte blanche would only harm the environment further.
“Decentralisation of such clearances
is welcome. But our agencies have been woefully inefficient in enforcement and
we cannot risk our environment with them,” he said.
‘Under consideration’
Sources in the Urban Development
Department confirmed that adoption of the model building bylaws was being
actively being considered. However, sources said that relaxation of environment
clearance has to be seen in the context of the Real Estate Regulatory Authority
(RERA) Act.
The State government is in the process
of framing rules for the Act and setting up the RERA authority that will
oversee large projects. This, the realty sector argues, will ensure enforcement
of building bylaws.
Meanwhile, R. Nagaraj, president of
the Confederation of Real Estate Developers’ Associations of India (CREDAI),
Karnataka, said this has been a long-standing demand of CREDAI. He said
projects are often stuck for three months or so over environmental clearance
and such a move would cut down the red tape.
Credit : http://www.thehindu.com/
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