HomeLatestPMAY 2.0 Backlog Prompts Bhubaneswar To Order Urgent ULB Verification

PMAY 2.0 Backlog Prompts Bhubaneswar To Order Urgent ULB Verification

Amid concerns over Odisha’s slow PMAY 2.0 progress, Bhubaneswar’s housing department has urged urban local bodies to expedite verification of 82,382 pending applications. With fewer than 14,000 verified and only 12% of households sanctioned statewide, authorities warn of implementation setbacks and stress urgent action, including awareness campaigns and faster documentation, to achieve sustainable and inclusive urban housing goals.

Despite an ongoing application drive under PMAY 2.0, responses from Odisha ULBs reveal that only 13,925 beneficiaries have completed verification, with project proposals submitted for just 11,959 units, highlighting critical delays in a flagship affordable-housing initiative. In a sharply worded letter, Satish Chandra Singh, Joint Secretary of the Odisha Urban Housing Mission, expressed dissatisfaction with sluggish progress. He emphasised that with beneficiary-led construction constituting a major share—48,598 of the total applications—the current pace falls far short of expectations.

Singh warned that Odisha’s housing performance under PMAY-U and PMAY 2.0 stands at a mere 12%, placing many local bodies in the lowest priority band as defined by the Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs (MoHUA). Cities in this bracket are required to mount vigorous awareness campaigns and redeploy manpower urgently. ULBs classified as Priority 2, including Khariar, Kotpad, and Champua—border towns near Andhra Pradesh and Chhattisgarh—must maintain rigour in application scrutiny before forwarding project plans. Singh urged these bodies to “exercise extra caution during the verification process” and swiftly move applications toward approval.

The state has stressed that timely verification is vital not just for speedy house allocation, but for embedding sustainable practices—such as solar water systems, rainwater harvesting, gender-neutral home designs, and waste segregation—into beneficiary-led construction projects, in line with zero-carbon city goals. The PMAY 2.0 scheme, which supports in-situ slum redevelopment and affordable housing, is predicated on beneficiary ownership. Delays in verification ripple through entire project chains—PLRs, grants, and housing delivery—threatening to stall Odisha’s efforts toward equitable urbanisation. Stakeholders argue that bolstering local capacity, intensifying public information drives, and engaging NGOs and civil-society groups is essential to bridge current verification gaps. Inclusive communication strategies are especially needed in rural-urban border zones where literacy and awareness may be low.

Funding models supporting beneficiary-led construction call for timely inspection and release of instalments. State officials are evaluating whether delayed funds in previously approved applications are undermining trust in PMAY 2.0, especially among marginalised households. Odisha’s renewed push comes amid growing scrutiny of the Centre’s affordable-housing commitments. Nationwide, PMAY 2.0 targets delivering millions of homes, but analysis shows that slow processing in early adopter states could jeopardise broader national objectives linked to Sustainable Development Goals and urban resilience.

UMER Singh Lal, a city planner, observes that “verification delays are symptomatic of weak governance structures. Speed must be matched by transparency, especially given the eco‑friendly components these homes are meant to deliver.” He advocates for monthly public dashboards detailing verification and grant releases. In Bhubaneswar and other Tier‑2 towns, home construction under PMAY‑U also seeks to reduce embodied carbon in building material choices. Delays could derail these green objectives, with postponed procurements and renegotiations affecting solar installations and recycled-material sourcing.

Singh’s directive compels ULBs to take decisive measures: appoint dedicated teams, set internal deadlines, invite NGOs into the verification process, and produce monthly status reports. High-performing cities can also mentor laggards, driving a statewide peer‑learning culture. As PMAY 2.0 enters its next implementation phase, Odisha is at a critical crossroads. With 70% of applications pending verification, demand-side inertia threatens to stall supply-side readiness. This breeds uncertainty among eligible families awaiting permanent, sustainable homes. While accelerating bureaucracy remains a perennial challenge, Odisha’s housing department has signaled its willingness to hold ULBs accountable. By ranking performance and attaching incentives—or penalties—within the MoHUA framework, Bhubaneswar hopes to spark urgency in local governance.

Ultimately, the focus on verification transcends mere paperwork; it is the gateway to delivering climate‑smart, accessible housing. How swiftly and effectively ULBs comply may determine whether PMAY 2.0 becomes a catalyst for equitable, eco‑friendly urban futures—or another missed opportunity in India’s social-housing journey.

PMAY 2.0 Backlog Prompts Bhubaneswar To Order Urgent ULB Verification
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