3,500 houses under PMAY allotted after Collector warns of strict action

A total of 3,500 out of the 6,000 houses sanctioned for Tiruvannamalai district under the Central government’s PMAY (Prime Minister’s Awas Yojana) have been allotted to beneficiaries following Collector KS Kandasamy threatened officials with suspension if they delayed the issue, according to official sources.
Tiruvannamalai Collector KS Kandasamy
Tiruvannamalai Collector KS Kandasamy
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Tiruvannamalai

A week ago, Kandasamy had uploaded the threat on a government officials whatsapp group, stating that he was there to sit by while officials dithered. As expected the immediate reaction was that the Rural Development Department officials’ association sported black badges for a day and told the media that they would move the State Human Rights Commission and also hold meetings in BDO offices to highlight the district head’s high-handedness.


Officials seeking anonymity initially said Kandasamy failed to understand the glitches in the Central government scheme and that many beneficiaries were unable to complete construction with the sanctioned amount.


But suddenly, officials worked overtime to ensure allotment of 3,500 houses when the public went allout to support Kandasamy. While the local farmers’ association staged a demonstration in front of the Tiruvannamalai collector’s office some days back, expressing solidarity with the collector’s move, “members of the public also chipped in with assurances of individual support,” says local resident K Kumarasamy.


However, what seems to have changed the association’s initial intransigence was a social media post which went viral revealing a conversation between a woman beneficiary from the district who said that she had paid a ‘mamool’ of Rs 4,000 for each of the three Rs 26,000 instalments released for the housing scheme by local officials.


Talking to this reporter, Kandasamy said he had received “complaints of officials in BDO offices refusing to allot houses till their palms were greased”.


Accepting that allotment was a lengthy process where beneficiaries’ ration and Aadhar cards had to be cross-checked and then registered online, he said “this can in no way be a reason for officials to delay allotment”.


A Tiruvannamalai resident and former official said “if the collector had asked beneficiaries to name officials who demanded and received illegal gratification, there would not be even one official who would be exempt. So pervasive is corruption that officials knew they would lose if the public resorted to telling the district head allthey knew.”

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