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Regional Plan 2021 to be georeferenced for Gati Shakti integration
Regional Plan 2021 to be georeferenced for Gati Shakti integration

Time of India

timea day ago

  • Politics
  • Time of India

Regional Plan 2021 to be georeferenced for Gati Shakti integration

Panaji: State govt on Tuesday decided to transform maps of the existing non-georeferenced Regional Plan of Goa (RP), 2021, into georeferenced raster and vector formats for integration into the PM Gati Shakti State Master Plan. The master plan is a national initiative aimed at transforming infrastructure and logistical planning across the country. Georeferencing involves the aligning of satellite imagery or other types of maps with real-world geographic coordinates. Maps in the raster format are composed of pixels, while those in the vector format are defined by mathematical equations that describe lines, curves and shapes. Goa govt will appoint a consultant who will georeference and digitise the RP 2021, incorporating the suggestions and inputs provided during the course of preparation, and as may be required as per the town and country planning (TCP) department. The TCP department has recognised a critical need to convert existing non-georeferenced PDFs and AutoCAD files of RP 2021 into georeferenced datasets. Maps will be georeferenced using data from the land survey department as reference points. The georeferenced maps will undergo strict quality control to ensure that the raster data perfectly corresponds to the land survey data. GIS thematic maps will be generated from the digitised data, with an expected accuracy of 0.25mm. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Trade Bitcoin & Ethereum – No Wallet Needed! IC Markets Start Now Undo A senior official said that the digitised shape files will contain accurate and complete attribute data, corresponding to geographic features within the maps. 'Special attention will be given to ensuring consistency between spatial data and attribute data,' the official said. The consultant will ensure that all steps in the project undergo rigorous quality control to ensure the data is accurate, reliable, and meets the specified standards. 'To maintain high data quality and ensure that the final outputs align with the expectations of the TCP department, a comprehensive verification process will be implemented,' the official said. Get the latest lifestyle updates on Times of India, along with Doctor's Day 2025 , messages and quotes!

ODPs case another indictment of TCP's urban planning flaws
ODPs case another indictment of TCP's urban planning flaws

Time of India

time23-06-2025

  • Politics
  • Time of India

ODPs case another indictment of TCP's urban planning flaws

Panaji: The order of the high court of Bombay at Goa regarding the outline development plans (ODPs) for five prominent coastal villages — Calangute, Candolim, Arpora, Nagoa, and Parra — brings into sharp focus the long-standing allegations of arbitrary land conversion and procedural violations that have plagued the town and country planning (TCP) department. This is not the first time the judiciary reversed the department's policies. From putting on hold a circular on ODPs for the five villages to virtually striking down the TCP department's power to unilaterally alter the zoning of private plots through Section 17(2) of the TCP Act, 1974, the courts have emerged as the battleground for Goa's land politics. In most of these cases, the judiciary found the department's actions procedurally flawed, environmentally negligent, or contrary to statutory planning norms, say activists who have taken up cudgels against the department. The earliest large-scale expression of public distrust began with the Regional Plan 2011. Accusations of arbitrary zoning changes benefiting real estate interests led to the plan's scrapping, triggering the formation of the task force for Regional Plan 2021. This exercise ran into allegations that large swathes of land were converted to settlement zones without public consultation, prompting govt to once again keep it in abeyance. Since then, successive BJP govts have tried to bring in piecemeal changes in the RP2021 in the guise of amendments designed to 'correct' the errors. Vijai Sardesai was the first to try making incremental tweaks through Section 16B of the TCP Act during his brief stint as TCP minister in 2018. When this was challenged in the HC, present TCP minister Vishwajit Rane rushed in Section 17(2) in the guise of correcting 'inadvertent errors' in the RP2021. As public pressure mounted, and with Section 17(2) being challenged through a PIL, Rane brought in Section 39(A) for ease of land conversions. Under this, the TCP department's chief town planner has been empowered to alter or modify the RP2021 and the ODPs. According to Goa Foundation, 95% of the applications under Section 39(A) involve changes from orchard (2.4 lakh sqm) and natural cover zones (1.4 lakh sqm) to settlement. Meanwhile, on March 13, the HC read down Section 17(2) of the TCP Act. Justices M S Karnik and Nivedita Mehta minced no words when they immobilised the amendment, saying that it 'virtually has the effect of mutilating the regional plan'. By then, the TCP department had already converted 26.5 lakh sqm. The HC order said that such large-scale conversion could have 'disastrous consequences' on an ecosystem as fragile as Goa's. The HC's order on the ODPs is yet another indictment of the TCP's flawed functioning, said an architect. 'Money is being taken for land conversion, but nobody is talking about need-based planning. Govt must decide what happens to the zone changes that have been done till now,' the architect added. The HC order comes after a series of back and forth between environmentalists, the TCP department, the HC, and the Supreme Court. In fact, while hearing a special leave petition by Goa govt against the Bombay HC's order restraining construction based on the ODP for the five villages, Supreme Court Justice Satish Chandra Sharma told Goa's counsel, 'Please don't turn Goa into a concrete jungle.' The message never got passed down, with govt continuing to defend the ODPs in the HC. While these reversals brought uncertainty upon builders, investors, and landowners in Bardez—many of whom benefited from conversions in the ODP—the courts have signalled a zero-tolerance approach to irregularities in urban planning.

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