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Maharashtra News Updated Jul 2, 2026

Maharashtra Assembly Passes Landmark Bill to Empower Women Farmers

The Maharashtra Legislative Assembly unanimously passed the Maharashtra Women Farmers Empowerment Act, 2026. The bill provides formal recognition to women farmers through Woman Farmer Certificates. It also creates a dedicated fund for welfare, credit, and training programs. The legislation aims to address long-standing gender-blind policies in agriculture.

Maha Assembly unanimously passes bill to recognise, empower women farmers

Mumbai, July 2

The Maharashtra Legislative Assembly on Thursday unanimously passed "The Maharashtra Women Farmers Empowerment Act, 2026."

The bill, which was presented by Agriculture Minister Dattatraya Bharane, addresses long-standing systemic exclusions by providing formal recognition and dedicated welfare funds for female agricultural workers.

He claimed that the bill is crucial for the holistic development of women.

For decades, agricultural frameworks have largely remained gender-blind, restricting formal benefits to landholders. According to the bill, while women make up a massive percentage of rural labourers who cultivate family or community lands without formal titles, extension systems and credit structures have historically overlooked them.

To rectify this, the bill introduces the legal issuance of formal "Woman Farmer Certificates".

The bill expansively updates the term "farmer" to include any woman resident of Maharashtra who, individually or jointly, participates in Core Cultivation and livestock, including crops, poultry, dairy, fisheries, sericulture, and agro-forestry, in the innovation and preservation of diverse seeds, climate-resilient farming, and integrated systems and value addition and processing of raw agricultural or animal products.

Besides, the women residents as farmers will also include landless labourers, operational holders, contractual tenants, landless livestock rearers, plantation labourers, and pastoralists and also women engaged in agricultural work for at least one season per year, regardless of whether they migrate for work.

To back the legislative promises with financial teeth, the bill mandates the creation of the Maharashtra State Fund for Women Farmers. The specialised fund will draw capital from the Consolidated Fund of the State, grants from the Central Government, and miscellaneous public or private donations.

The funds are legally earmarked to finance welfare programmes, extend line-of-credit facilities, build a specialised database, and enhance overall training frameworks targeted exclusively at women farmers.

The bill also introduces an accountability ecosystem comprising a Women Farmers Empowerment Cell and a State Monitoring Committee.

For local governance and dispute resolution, the bill charts specific parameters utilising local Gram Sabhas and designated "Appellate Officers" to handle registration and grievances smoothly across scheduled and non-scheduled rural zones.

By issuing identity certifications and tying them directly to state welfare funding, the Maharashtra government seeks to fulfil Directive Principles of State Policy, ensuring equitable, gender-sensitive resource allocation.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Vikram M

Good intentions, but how will they ensure the funds actually reach the women farmers? We've seen too many government schemes fail due to corruption. The monitoring committee must have strong local representation, not just bureaucrats.

Siddharth J

This is a progressive step. Including landless labourers and seasonal workers is crucial. The definition of "farmer" should have been updated decades ago. Hope other states follow Maharashtra's lead. 📜

Meera T

As someone from a farming family, I can say this is long overdue. Women work from dawn to dusk on our farm but never received any credit. However, I worry about the bureaucracy - will getting the Woman Farmer Certificate be another paper chase? 😊

Rohit P

This is great news. But let's not forget that women farmers need more than just certificates - they need access to land rights, credit, and market linkages. The fund and training programs will be useless if ground-level implementation fails.

Arjun K

Finally, a bill that acknowledges the invisible workforce! My grandmother used to say, "Khet mein haath lagane wali aurat bhi kisaan hai" (The woman who works the field is also a farmer). This legislation gives her words legal backing. 👩‍🌾

Kavya N

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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