Tuesday, July 10, 2018

TN amends Town and Country Planning Act to make provision for TDR


Chennai:

Tamil Nadu government amended Tamil Nadu Town and Country Planning Act by introducing additional provision for Transferrable Development Rights (TDRs) to make it legally binding.

The state government amended Section 35 of the Act where in the clause pertaining to Transfer of Development Rights was included. Initially, the government had framed rules for implementing TDR but it did not have statutory backing.

Transferrable Development Rights (TDRs) allow governments to acquire land in exchange for development rights. These rights allow for properties or land to be developed in other areas of the city and those having TDRs can use the rights themselves or sell it to developers.

Since the state did not have legal backing for the sale of TDRs, the amendment in the Act could facilitate cheap and rapid land acquisition for the government while redirecting development to other to other under-developed areas of the cities or important urban goals like affordable housing.

The move to amend the Act comes after Tamil Nadu Slum Clearance Board (TNSCB) is wooing real estate developers to market 20,520 square metre of special transferrable development rights to build homes.

Under the slum clearance board scheme, TNSCB will identify private developer to provide alternate accommodation to slum dwellers proposed to be evicted through a bidding process and enter into an agreement with private developer for the provision of alternate accommodation to slum beneficiaries.

The developer who has obtained the special TDR may utilise it himself or transfer it after getting clearance from Member Secretary of Chennai Metropolitan Development authority.

TDR, which first emerged as a policy in United States in the 1960s, was implemented in the state by creating a separate TDR division in Chennai Metropolitan Development Authority. However, without legal backing and infrastructure and a common platform to trade TDRs, it had few takers forcing to the government to rethink on the feasibility of having a separate TDR department in CMDA.

Factfile:

1. Transferable development Right first emerged as a policy in the US in 1960s. It was used to preserve certain parts of city which had historic buildings

2. In India, TDR was dirst implemented in Mumbai in 1991 to acquire land for public amenities like gardens and roads.

3. Between 1991-2004, more than 21,00000 square metre of land was surrendered through TDR in MUmbai for road development and slum redevelopment

4. In Bangalore, TDR was initated in 2005 to help government with large scale infrastructure projects

5. Transferrable Development Rights was issued in Second Master plan and it has few takers in Chennai. It is learnt it is due to lack of mechanism of trade and price discovery as Chennai is not a active TDR market

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