Tuesday, October 28, 2014
Wednesday, May 4, 2011
SCP Allocations in Bihar's Budget (2011-12) - A Plate Too Peppered!
Anindo Banerjee
Imagine a hungry stomach, denied of food for long, being suddenly served a surfeit of diet, but containing a queer mix of iron scraps, rubber and grass!
This is precisely what the Government of Bihar seems to have done in response to the longstanding demand of dalit organizations for a proportionate allocation of state’s budget for Scheduled Castes, in keeping with the proposition of Special Component Plan, first mooted under the sixth five-year plan. As per the proposition, the annual budgets of government departments are required to contain allocations matching the population proportion of Scheduled Castes for meeting the development needs of the latter. Also, according to Planning Commission’s directive to states (DO No. M-13054/2/2005-BC (Jan 12, 2006), “Only those schemes should be included under SCP that ensure direct benefits to individuals or families belonging to Scheduled Castes”.
The Government of Bihar has earmarked Rs. 4238.94 crore (constituting 17.66% of the total State Plan outlay of Rupees 24,000 Crores) under the Scheduled Castes Special Component Plan (SC-SCP, henceforth) for the financial year 2011-12. These include new budget items worth Rs. 3920.44 Crores under the newly activated code of 789, denoting allocations under SC-SCP. The unprecedented level of allocation for the Scheduled Castes, who account for nearly 15.7% of the state’s population as per Census 2001, is meant to symbolize the Government’s commitment to facilitate large-scale inclusion of dalits in the ongoing development processes in the state. On the face of it, the allocation seems a welcome measure of social justice, in view of the longstanding denial of dalits of their due share in the state’s budgets ever since the idea of SCP was mooted!
Irrational items under SC-SCP – A mockery of the spirit of social equity!
A close look at the SCP allocations in Bihar reveals the meaningless nature of large parts of the SCP outlays for contributing to the development of dalit communities in the state. Some of the absurd allocations under the SCP for the year 2011-12 include the following, amongst others:
· The Grants-in-Aid for institutions like the Bihar Agricultural University in Bhagalpur, Rajendra Agricultural University, Horticulture College in Nalanda, Agricultural Colleges in Purnea and Shahabad;
· Loans and advances to Bihar State Hydroelectric Corporation, Bihar State Financial Corporation, Bihar State Electricity Board and Bihar State Investment and Credit Corporation;
· Minor works for maintenance of private tubewells, conservation of heritage buildings and for meeting capital expenses on minor irrigation schemes, land purchase for road construction and medical colleges; machines and equipment for Medical Colleges, Polytechnics, Engineering Colleges and for promotion of sports.
Construction works amounting to over 809 crores constitute an important category of allocations under the SC-SCP. These include provisions for construction and maintenance of police buildings; stadium and sports structures; irrigation projects of Kosi, Gandak, Sone, Kiul, Badua and Chandan basins; flood control projects of north Bihar; water discharge projects; revival of Zamindari baandhs; construction works related to airports and roads; construction of buildings of hospitals, PHCs and HSCs; construction works related to Bihar Fire Brigade services and Polytechnics and Technical Colleges.
Interestingly, the State Government has booked its entire contributions for implementation of important flagship schemes of the Government of India under SC-SCP, as if these schemes are meant only for the dalit communities! The state contributions for Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan, Indira Awas Yojana, JNNURM, IHSDP, SGSY, NREGS, SJSRY, National Scheme for Development of Sugarcane Best Capping System and several other purposes, collectively amounting to over 971 crores, are all booked under the SC Special Component Plan category. Bihar’s contribution to prevention of Ganga Water Pollution is also expected to be carried out of the SCP allocations.
Similarly, many of the State Government’s schemes are to be financed out of the allocations under the SC-SCP category. These include the provision of over 93 crores for purchase of materials and supplies related to the Mukhya Mantri Poshak Yojana, Mukhya Mantri Cycle Yojana, dress scheme for children of Anganwadi Centres etc. The SCP allocations also include the Grants in Aid relating to Bihar Trade Development Fund, premium for State Crop Insurance Funds, transport provisions for urban local bodies, rural dairy employment schemes and the social security pension schemes sponsored by the state government.
A number of other lumpsum provisions that are as unrelated to the development interests of dalits as chalk and cheese (collectively amounting to over Rupees 928 Crores) have also been budgeted within the category of SC-SCP, including provisions for allowances for elected GP representatives of gram panchayats, gram kutcheries, panchayat samitis and zilla parishads; National E-Governance Scheme (Common Service Centre), State Data Centre, E-governance State Scheme, BSWAN and dissemination Scheme for IT; construction of Panchayat Sarkar buildings; Grants-in-Aid to local bodies, municipal councils and nagar panchayats for water supply and to urban local bodies for sewerage construction; besides lumpsum provisions related to Rashtriya Mashyamik Shiksha Abhiyan, Mukhya Mantri Kanya Vivah Yojana, Mukhya Mantri Nari Shakti Yojana, Mukhya Mantri Kanya Suraksha Yojana, Indira Gandhi National Old Age Pension Scheme, Indira Gandhi National Widow Pension Scheme and Indira Gandhi National Disability Pension Scheme. Such provisions also cover the Backward Regions Grant Fund; conservation of forests and strengthening of infrastructure; water supply in uncovered, partially covered, and poor-water-quality areas and the Minimum Needs Programme, amongst others.
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Friday, October 23, 2009
Notes from Kiratpur
Staying with Tasleem saheb’s family in Kubaul village of Kiratpur as part of Praxis’ internal immersion arrangements was memorable on many counts. One, it brought about a relaxed and rare opportunity of living in a rural household without being driven by any specific research agenda that many of my earlier visits to villages had been based on. Two, it offered a great opportunity to understand the daily struggles of life in a remote cluster of villages disadvantaged on account of its location between the Kosi and Kamla Balan rivers and the resulting proneness to periodic submergence. As it turned out, the visit provided a highly insightful account of lives trapped between embankments, devastated by floods, shaken by compulsions of distress migration and affected by acute exclusion from basic services.
A brief account of Tasleem Saheb’s family and the village would be useful at this point. Tasleem Saheb, now in his seventies, is a descendant of Hyder Ali, a traveler from Samastipur who settled in Kuvaul village along with his three sons – Saburi, Sardari and Darbari. He is the oldest surviving member in an extended family of more than sixty members and lives separately along with his wife in a thatched cottage located on the southern edge of Kuvaul village. The great-grandson of Hyder Ali, Tasleem saheb has three sons of his own, other than the children of his three deceased brothers, all of who live in Kuvaul constituting the largest extended family of the village. Most of the adult male members of the family are away working in cities like Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, Varanasi and an attempt of tracing the genealogical descent of Hyder Ali’s lineage indicated that the phenomenon of distress migration started mainly after the flood of 1987.
As regards the village, it is situated to the west of the western embankment over Kosi, at a distance of about 6 km from Kiratpur block. Balaan, a tributary to the Kosi river is located to the east of the village and causes floods almost every year. The village is also affected by the waters of Gehuan stream located to its north. Reaching the village had its own elements of adventure, as we had to change buses at two places due to sudden breakdowns, had to traverse a dusty terrain of eight-odd kilometers on a jeep and then had to cover the last stretch of eighteen kilometers on a boat.
Many in the village remember the year of 1987 on account of devastations caused due to a breach in the Kosi embankment near Nauhatta. Till date, the village hasn’t fully recovered from the damages caused by the silt deposited on its agricultural land. For instance, the productivity of maize, one of the main crops of the village, has declined to only about 0.64 quintals (1.6 manns) per kattha (one kattha equals less than twentieth part of an acre), which is less than half of the total yield harvested before the floods of 1987. Farmers with large land holdings, e.g. Triveni Kumar Raman who owns over 80 acres of land in the village, are forced to either leave large parts of their land holdings fallow or contract sharecroppers to cultivate some parts of their land. According to Triveni, only about 6 acres of their land is currently under cultivation, which provides a good account of the reduced scale of agriculture practiced in the village since the floods of 1987. This is also attributed to the migration of a large number of agricultural labourers and farmers to faraway places in search of livelihood.
People migrate to a variety of places in search of livelihood. The trend set in after the flood of 1987, as indicated by the family members of Tasleem Saheb in a genealogy diagram facilitated by us. The prevalent agricultural wage rates in the area are as low as Rs. 25/-. The commonest destinations are the urban centres of Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata and Varanasi. Of late, closure of several popular livelihood sites located in the cities has started forcing people to explore alternative options, and has triggered off a trend of reverse migration.
One of Mohd. Ramjani’s daughters passed away while delivering. Ramjani is the second son of Tasleem Saheb, our host. Deaths during childbirth are felt to be very common in the remote area suffering from an acute dearth of basic health care facilities. Though Kiratpur was accorded the status of a block about twenty years back, the administrative offices continue to operate from Ghanshyampur. Ramjani’s daughter-in law suffers from TB, and has to take care of her small children in the absence of her husband who has been away at Varanasi for many years. The area also suffers from a high level of incidence of diseases like Kala Azar, Malaria and Diarrhea. Establishment of Asha Kendra – a primary health care institution located in neighboring Tarvada village – is believed to have brought some relief to the inhabitants of the area. However, the villagers have to go all the way to the district headquarters at Darbhanga to seek cure for most major ailments.
During our stay in Mohd. Tasleem’s house, we were cared very well by members of his extended family, especially by his wife, daughter in law and the children. Our occasional attempts to offer assistance in their household chores helped in striking a good rapport with them. We threshed grains, washed dishes and did some shopping for the household. Tasleem Saheb’s wife, probably in her late fifties, would wake up very early in the morning and get occupied in various activities in the house and the kitchen. We would have visitors from morning till night, and invitations to visit different families. In the night, we would share magic tricks and ghost stories with the children of the house before going to bed. Anwarul - one of the children of the family who was about to be married, would be the target of many jokes and teasing remarks.
The day we left the village, we were seen off by a huge number of people, including Tasleem’s family members and his neighbours. We got invitations to attend Anwarul’s wedding, and invitations to visit the village whenever we happened to be in that area again. Unfortunately, we could not meet Mohd. Tasleem at the time of leaving the house, who had gone to Kusheshwar Asthan to discuss arrangements for Anwarul’s wedding with the latter’s prospective in-laws. He was expected to return the previous night itself, but could not undertake the long journey by foot due to extreme heat conditions. We said goodbye to our hosts, expressing hopes for the safe return of Tasleem Saheb, and made our way to the river.
Monday, October 19, 2009
Decentralized District Planning - The Road Ahead from Vaishali
Decentralized District Planning – The Road Ahead from Vaishali
Anindo Banerjee
The Eleventh Five Year Plan has stressed that it is absolutely critical for the inclusiveness of India’s growth process that the large numbers of elected local government representatives are fully involved in planning, implementing and supervising the delivery of essential public services. While most states of India have enacted legislations for the constitution of District Planning Committees in conformity with Article 243ZD of the constitution, the actual involvement of panchayati raj institutions in formulating decentralized district plans has remained quite limited across the country.
The article reflects upon the experiences and learnings from an Integrated District Planning exercise undertaken by Panchayati Raj Institutions in Vaishali district of Bihar with support from Unicef, PRAXIS and CENCORED. Conducted in line with relevant guidelines of Planning Commission, the exercise was aimed at strengthening the District Planning Committee of Vaishali, by way of provision of technical, secretarial and capacity building support. The author is associated with Praxis – Institute for Participatory Practices.
Is a state like Bihar ready for decentralized planning? I have often pondered over the dilemma posed by the excitement of supporting some highly promising processes of integrated district planning in Vaishali district of Bihar, in the contrasting backdrop of a not-too-favourable policy environment at the state level, which has failed to devolve any meaningful roles, powers or finances for the agencies of local self-governance even sixteen years after the 73rd and 74th amendments to the constitution took effect! Even more disturbing are the signs of increasing centralization of powers – clearly evident, for instance, in provisions like Sections 79 and 75 of Bihar Municipal Bill 2007, empowering the State Government to direct urban local bodies to undertake any work within the ambit of the 12th Schedule of the Constitution of India regardless of the source of funds, and to change the expenditure limits of municipal bodies by way of notifications issued from time to time. The motives underlying such moves are hard to fathom!
Successive State Finance Commissions in Bihar have not been able to press upon the State government the need of devolution of adequate financial resources for the panchayati raj institutions (PRIs) of the state, thereby failing on an important constitutional duty. The contrasts with most other states are glaring; for instance, while the 3rd State Finance Commission of Kerala provided for devolution of over 1,950 Crore rupees in favour of PRIs (for the base year of 2006-07; including grants for development, maintenance and general purposes and subject to 10% annual increment), Bihar hasn’t committed any assured share for its PRIs out of its revenue proceeds or plan outlay. The only sources of money for the PRIs of Bihar are the grants received from Central Finance Commission, besides a promissory share of 3% in the net tax realizations at the local level and funds received under the schemes of NREGA and BRGF. Unfortunately, the method of execution of these schemes leaves little control in the hands of the elected representatives!
Yet, the experience of working towards the emergence of one of the first integrated district plan in the country, in partnership with multiple stakeholders in Vaishali has had its own highs. In an inception workshop held in the beginning of the process, the members of the Zilla Parishad and urban local bodies of the district stated their full commitment to the process despite occasional expressions of skepticism stemming from past experiences, recalling how most district-level plans have traditionally been formulated by line departments or the officialdom, bypassing any involvement of elected representatives. They also nominated a steering body of representatives to oversee the district planning process under the Chairmanship of the District Magistrate (DM). Subsequently, the DM played an important role in convening a meeting of all the important district level officers, including heads of various line departments and all the Sub-Divisional Officers and Block Development Officers posted in the district, for a daylong discussion on the significance of the planning process. The workshop brought about a rare opportunity for the district level officers to collectively analyze the strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and constraints faced by the district in various crucial sectors and to formulate a roadmap for undertaking the participatory planning exercise. The workshop not only yielded useful leads for the planning exercise, but also brought about an air of sanctity regarding the decentralized planning process entrusted to panchayati raj institutions. Subsequently, when the planning process was rolled out across various local bodies of the district, it enjoyed the support of a good range of stakeholders.
The support received from various local bodies was due also to an intensive round of workshops involving key functionaries of gram panchayats and urban local bodies in Vaishali. Representatives of every single institution of local self-governance were invited to these workshops, which ran for over two months across 32 batches. In addition to the Mukhiyas, the deputy Mukhiyas (who, in many cases, represent the opposition at the panchayat level), the Panchayat Sachivs and the Rozgar Sevaks of all the panchayats were also invited to the residential trainings, in order that sufficient capacities and interests are generated at the village level for decentralized planning to be a continuous process. The workshops brought about a rare occasion for the local level leaders to come together, deliberate on burning issues related to local governance, narrate their experiences and enhance capacities to undertake planning in an inclusive and participatory manner.
One of the most crucial arrangements contributing to the planning process in Vaishali was the establishment of a District Planning and Monitoring Cell (DPMC), aimed at providing secretarial support to the District Planning Committee. The Cell, set up with support from Unicef, played a critical role in liaising with key stakeholders in the district, facilitating vital communications on time and in organizing important events. Endowed with a small team of professionals and a good balance of essential competencies, which included skills as diverse as conducting training, managing databases and maintaining close contact with key government officials, the team did well to keep the process on track. Housed within a walking distance from the District Collectorate, the DPMC office remained a bustling hub of activity during the entire planning exercise.
At the local level, steering committees were formed at the level of each ward (unit of representation of about 500 people in rural areas; and between 1200 – 15000 people in urban areas, depending upon the type of municipality) to support the elected representatives at the ward level in the planning process. This was a pioneering arrangement at the ward level, not envisaged even in the Bihar Panchayati Raj Act 2006. While the Bihar Municipality Act 2007 provides for constitution of Ward Committees, such bodies have not been formed in most municipal bodies in the state, including those in Vaishali. Each set of plan suggestions emerging from the level of wards was duly signed off by at least twenty local residents constituting the ward level steering committees. While this helped in making the process democratic at the local level, formal involvement of at least twenty people in each ward also made fulfillment of the quorum (twentieth part of the total number of voters in a panchayat, amounting roughly to about 210 voters) for a valid gram sabha much easier!
However, several threatening developments kept popping up during the course of the planning exercise, jeopardizing the prospects of the process. Midway through the process, all the panchayat secretaries posted in the district were transferred, leading to widespread protests and occasional resistance to the planning exercise as well. For the facilitators of the village level planning process, it made access to secondary data pertaining to the panchayats very difficult and delayed the planning process in several panchayats. The process also witnessed transfer of the District Magistrate, the Deputy Development Commissioner, the District Planning Officer and a Sub Division Officer midway through the planning process, though any potential ill-effects of these transfers were preempted by prompt follow-ups with the new occupants of these positions and securing their support to the planning exercise.
More surprisingly, activities related to a parallel planning process for the Backward Region Grant Fund (BRGF) emerged as a key threat to the ‘integrated’ nature of the planning exercise undertaken in Vaishali. One morning, it came to the knowledge of the District Planning and Monitoring Cell that some people are approaching the Panchayat Mukhiyas for suggestions regarding the contents of BRGF plans for the year 2010 – 2011! This seemed to bypass the integrated planning process and undermine its sanctity. A prior scrutiny of the BRGF plans of Vaishali for previous years had pointed at numerous choices of interventions that were more appropriately suited for financing under various flagship schemes of the government of India and did not seem to make a good case for being picked up under BRGF! Also, the budget estimates for the village level BRGF plans for previous years had exceeded the financial ceilings by far and the District Development Commissioner had to ask for a downward revision of the plan sizes to suit the BRGF funds available in the district last year! Alarmingly, most of the BRGF plans of the previous years had not been ratified by the gram sabhas and had to be returned by the District Planning Officer for endorsement from the people’s forum!
Thankfully, on taking up the matter with the District Planning Officer, an instruction was promptly issued from the DM’s office to all the BDOs to ensure that no plan, regardless of sector, department or scheme, should be allowed to escape the purview of the integrated district planning process, and making it mandatory for parallel plans, if any, to be endorsed by the gram sabhas during discussions on the integrated plan!
The issue regarding the BRGF plans, however, brought about an important learning related to the use of BRGF funds, particularly its potential to completely derail or undermine an integrated planning exercise, unless clear safeguards were provided to prevent its misuse. Ideally, BRGF funds should be utilized only to facilitate integrated planning processes and to finance aspired interventions that cannot be taken up under available schemes. This also established the need for better convergence between agencies dealing with diverse schemes. While the Department of Panchayati Raj is the nodal agency for BRGF, the Department of Planning has the mandate of ensuring integrated district plans.
Bringing about a collective interest in the planning process
The roadmap to the decentralized planning process in Vaishali was drawn in an inception workshop involving all members of the District Panchayat as well as key municipal bodies in the district, including the Hajipur Nagar Parishad and the Nagar Panchayats of Lalganj and Mahnar. It was probably the first time in the history of the district that elected representatives from both the urban as well as rural streams of local governance came together to deliberate upon an exercise of common interest. The workshop also involved the District Magistrate and brought about an important opportunity of direct interaction between the elected representatives and the administrative head of the district. This also established an important sense of concurrence regarding the choice to pursue an integrated District Planning exercise across all stakeholders.
The workshop played a crucial role in prompting a marginalized community of people’s representatives to assume an active role in the planning process. Initial expressions of skepticism gave way to voluntary commitments of support to the planning exercise and several members of the District Panchayat and the Nagar Parishad nominated themselves for playing a steering role.
Another important event that wielded enormous influence on the momentum of the planning exercises at different levels was a workshop that brought together the entire team of district administration to commit itself to the success of the unprecedented District Planning exercise. The workshop was held in a highway motel, detached from the daily buzz and business of government offices in the district. The participants included the District Magistrate, the Additional Collector (Revenue), all the Sub Division Magistrates, all the Block Development Officers and key functionaries of various line departments, including the District level Officers related to departments of Planning, Panchayati Raj, Education, Health, Agriculture, Animal Husbandry, Horticulture and Welfare, amongst others. In the workshop, the participants deliberated upon important strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and challenges facing the district in the key sectors of education, health, development of women and children, infrastructure, poverty reduction and environment. Subsequently, dates were identified for rolling out the process across various blocks, including dates for visioning workshops at various levels.
Capacity building and deployment of process facilitators
A pool of 32 people was carefully selected and deployed across the district to extend support to local bodies in undertaking the planning exercise. The facilitators were identified by Cencored – a reputed organization based in Patna – and recruited after an interview and written test conducted by a panel inclusive of the District Planning Officer and representatives of Unicef, Praxis and Cencored. They were provided with a detailed orientation to the significance, objectives and design of the decentralized planning process in a four-day residential workshop held at Hajipur, followed by a pilot fieldwork in a panchayat of Lalganj block. The performance of the facilitators during the pilot fieldwork helped in identifying lead facilitators for different clusters of villages.
Initially, the facilitators were divided into 4 teams of 6 people and each team was allotted a cluster of 4 blocks of Vaishali district for extending support to the planning process in a gradual and continuous manner. The remaining facilitators were assigned the responsibility of conducting trainings for the functionaries of gram panchayats and urban local bodies in a residential setting. The field-teams moved out to different villages in pairs and started contacting the leaders of local bodies for initiating the planning exercise. In particular, they were expected to extend support to a few critical activities of the planning process, including a pre-process meeting of key stakeholders of the village, a local level visioning exercise for articulating desired transformations over a five year period, a mapping exercise to identify key intervention opportunities in the village, a meeting of panchayat leaders to prepare for gram sabhas and support in ensuring that the gram sabha meetings are held in a democratic and inclusive manner. In terms of number of days, each pair of facilitators was roughly expected to visit each panchayat between seven to ten times for ensuring timely accomplishment of the planning exercise.
Initially, the pace of activity relating to the planning exercise was relatively slow. Key factors affecting the pace included elections to Primary Agriculture Cooperative Societies held in the state after more than a decade, transfer of panchayat secretaries and a number of important festivals including Eid-ul-Fitr, Durga Puja, Diwali and Chhath. It forced a rethink of the operational strategies and led to entrustment of each individual facilitator with a revised, output-linked scheme of compensation. While such a mid-course revision of the terms of work created a good deal of pressure on the facilitators (resulting also in the threat of mid-course resignation by some facilitators and hoarding of plan documents by some), they needed to be addressed with a delicate balance of motivational inputs and strict instructions for adherence to deadlines!
Visioning for local development
During the planning process, visioning sessions were facilitated at the level of the district, blocks and gram panchayats, involving elected people’s representatives and key government functionaries. In line with the six categories of development goals formulated by the Government of Bihar, the participants of the visioning workshops were divided into groups and requested to think of key transformations aspired by them with regard to opportunities of income enhancement and poverty reduction; status of education; quality of health care; basic infrastructure; development of women and children, and status of environment. The visioning workshops were convened by the Block Development Officers of respective blocks and typically included leaders and members of panchayat samitis, mukhiyas and functionaries of gram panchayats or urban local bodies falling within a block, besides officers and government functionaries deputed at the block level.
Planning processes were initiated in the local communities immediately after the visioning workshops held at the block level. A start-up meeting was held in each village, involving the elected leaders and key local stakeholders, during which a village-specific roadmap for the planning exercise was drawn and a visioning exercise was conducted for identification of key transformations aspired by the residents of the village. In some villages, a participatory mapping exercise was also conducted on the same day to assess distribution of vital resources and for identification of intervention opportunities. Roles were distributed amongst the participating villagers to bring about large-scale awareness about the ensuing planning exercise and for constitution of ward level steering groups to support the planning activity.
On an average, the entire planning exercise took between one to three weeks in various villages. Once the important, prioritized needs pertaining to different sectors were identified from various wards of a local body, the members of Executive Committee of the gram panchayats came together to collate the same and prepare for presentation before a gram sabha. At least a week’s notice was served for convening the gram sabhas, which were mostly conducted during the months of September and October (the first gram sabha related to the district planning exercise was held on August 13, 2009 in Sherpur Chhatwara panchayat of Mahua block). Barring occasional instances of conflict and resistance, which were due mostly to divergent political affiliations of the panchayat leaders and participants of the gram sabhas, the public meetings went off peacefully in most places. In some difficult places, the facilitators had to struggle hard to locate the panchayat leaders during or after a gram sabha for securing their signature on the plan documents. One of the important advices given to the facilitators during their training earlier was about ensuring that the plans emerging from the participatory processes were recorded in the official register of the gram panchayat!
Leaving behind capacities for decentralized planning
In addition to training of leaders and key functionaries of the local bodies, one of important strategies employed in the process was identification of one competent local resource person in each village by the facilitators, to work closely with them and avail of hands-on training in facilitation to be able to support similar planning exercises undertaken in future. Identification of such local resource persons helped the facilitators immensely in accessing important information about the villages and in establishing contact with key local people.
Salient learnings from the Vaishali experience
Lack of clarity about financial outlays at various levels in a district appeared as a big challenge for the district planning exercise, which made the planning exercise somewhat speculative, though based on an examination of expenditure data for previous years. Timely preparation of clear ‘resource envelops’, disaggregated for various levels, sectors and schemes, should be an essential prerequisite for initiating integrated decentralized planning processes, to preempt situations where plan-sizes and contents are required to be revised undemocratically at a later stage! However, given that the planning process in Vaishali was undertaken well in advance for the financial year 2010 – 2011, there is a significant opportunity of informing the process of laying down district level plan targets and financial outlays undertaken by the Department of Planning at the state level.
The Backward Region Grant Funds provide an extremely significant window of opportunity to Panchayati Raj Institutions to undertake decentralized planning across a wide range of local needs. However, it seems BRGF-aided planning processes being undertaken in many districts with support from various technical support agencies have got reduced to a parallel planning exercise, often with little or no involvement of gram sabhas. Ideally, micro-plans prepared with support from provisions like BRGF should emerge as a singular point of reference for all schemes and interventions meant for local development. Once an integrated, comprehensive plan is prepared and approved by gram sabhas, it should leave no need for any parallel planning exercise to be undertaken for any scheme or purpose, by any line department or agency – at least with regard to direct inventions at the level of people. Thereafter, only those interventions ought to be supported under BRGF that cannot be taken up under any of the regular schemes. In many districts, BRGF seems to have become sort of a ‘compensation’ for Panchayati Raj Institutions after being denied their due opportunity of influencing interventions stemming from various line departments!
Any integrated district planning exercise, whether undertaken under BRGF or otherwise, must ensure prior concurrence amongst various stakeholders, regarding the need to preempt any parallel planning processes. This would necessarily demand formal workshops or interactions with functionaries of various line departments, officers at block and sub-division levels, and all heads of various planning-support functions at the district level (e.g. the DM, DDC, DPRO or DPO) to preempt such possibilities. Key planning bodies at the state and national levels must also play an active role in facilitating such concurrence, and ensure steps towards integrated planning processes.
Agencies facilitating integrated district plans must necessarily have a capacity building perspective for strengthening Panchayati Raj Institutions, and must invest greater efforts in bolstering democratic processes rather than in dealing with relatively less significant technicalities of plan outputs. Design of training modules for PRI leaders must include inputs around issues of equity, accountability and democratic governance, and should not be limited merely to technicalities of planning processes. The choice of technical support agencies and assessment of their perspectives and strategies hold crucial significance to this effect.
Every effort needs to be made to respect the sanctity of integrated plans emerging from the PRIs, by ensuring timely release of funds for implementation, and setting up of monitoring mechanisms at the level of standing committees of PRIs and vigilance committees at the level of Gram Sabhas. Monitoring indicators should be spelt out at the stage of planning itself and must include clear delineation of roles and accountabilities. At the district level, Monitoring Cells need to be set up within District Planning Committees to track the progress of district planning processes and to extend facilitation support to diffuse emerging problems, if any. Establishment of a District Planning and Monitoring Cell in Vaishali district, aimed at providing secretariat support to the District Planning Committee, helped significantly in preparation of an integrated district plan for the year 2010-11 in the district.
Convergence-facilitation units need to be set up within the structures of District Planning Committees, including representatives of various line departments, to extend help in finalization of interventions on the basis of integrated plans. Such units need to be set up also at the state level, for guiding convergence across various line departments.
Finally, the process of integrated district planning must start well in advance, preferably immediately after the completion of the planning and budgeting processes at the state level, and conclude by around November so as to feed the state level processes of planning for the following year. The commotion experienced towards the end of the planning process in Vaishali to meet the November deadline, necessitating avoidable revisions in the operational strategies, could be avoided if the processes of capacity building and planning had started at least a couple of months earlier.
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