Gujarat CM Demands Zero Tolerance for Poor Quality in Rural Development Works

Gujarat Chief Minister Bhupendra Patel has issued a stern warning against any compromise in the quality of public-interest works at the village level. He addressed over 260 sarpanches at a training programme, emphasizing that accountability and workmanship are fundamental to rural development. The CM urged village heads to ensure government schemes reach all beneficiaries and to utilize grants effectively with a saturation approach. Other state ministers highlighted direct fund transfers to panchayats and the importance of communication and public participation in village governance.

Key Points: Gujarat CM to Sarpanches: No Compromise on Rural Work Quality

  • Zero tolerance for poor quality in rural works
  • Accountability and transparency are central
  • Sarpanches urged to ensure scheme saturation
  • Planned use of grants and tech for service delivery
  • Development depends on public participation
3 min read

No tolerance for poor quality in rural works, Gujarat CM tells sarpanches

CM Bhupendra Patel warns sarpanches against poor quality in village projects, stressing accountability and transparency for true national development.

"There will be no tolerance for any compromise in the quality of works undertaken in public interest. - Bhupendra Patel"

Gandhinagar, Feb 3

Quality standards in public-interest works will not be compromised at the village level, Chief Minister Bhupendra Patel said on Tuesday, stressing that accountability and workmanship must remain central to rural development initiatives across Gujarat.

The Chief Minister was speaking at the inauguration of the 'Gram Shakti Training Programme' at the Gujarat Legislative Assembly Secretariat, organised by the Ganesh Vasudev Mavalankar Bureau of Parliamentary Studies and Training.

More than 260 sarpanches from villages in Banaskantha, Vav-Tharad, Mehsana, Patan, Sabarkantha and Aravalli districts of North Gujarat attended the programme.

Addressing the gathering, Patel said that villages formed the foundation of the country's development and that rural works must be carried out with transparency, quality and responsibility.

"There will be no tolerance for any compromise in the quality of works undertaken in public interest," he said, adding that true national development would be achieved only when development reached the last person in every village.

Referring to the Union Budget presented under the leadership of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, the Chief Minister said it had been framed with a focus on duty and placed special emphasis on rural development.

He urged sarpanches, as heads of villages, to discharge their responsibilities by following the principle of "Sabka Saath, Sabka Vikas, Sabka Vishwas and Sabka Prayas" and to ensure that government schemes and services reached all eligible beneficiaries.

Patel also called for planned utilisation of grants with 100 per cent targets through the Prime Minister's saturation approach.

He encouraged sarpanches to prepare systematic development plans, involve youth in village development and use technology to improve the delivery of civic services.

Assuring support from the state government, he said sarpanches should work without fear and with dedication to build developed villages, leading to a developed Gujarat and, in turn, a developed India.

Assembly Speaker Shankar Chaudhary said that implementing the Prime Minister's vision of the 'Gram Sachivalaya' at the grassroots level was the responsibility of sarpanches.

He noted that development was not limited to physical infrastructure alone but also depended on dialogue and public participation.

He said stronger communication between gram panchayats and Gram Sabhas would reduce conflict and strengthen democratic foundations.

Panchayat and Rural Housing Minister Rushikesh Patel said sarpanches had been empowered to utilise a significant share of panchayat grants for village development planning.

He added that all villages in Gujarat had been connected by at least two roads under the Mukhyamantri Gram Sadak Yojana and that the training programme would provide practical guidance on village administration.

Rural Development Minister Kunvarji Bavaliya said funds from central and state schemes were being transferred directly to gram panchayat accounts and that proper utilisation of these funds could transform villages.

He also referred to increased assistance under the Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana and support for sanitation facilities through MGNREGA.

Experts at the programme briefed sarpanches on the role of panchayats in parliamentary democracy, the VB G-RAM-G rural development scheme, panchayat accounting rules and the rights and duties of sarpanches in Gram Sabhas.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priyanka N
Training sarpanches is crucial, but accountability must be enforced. In my village, the grant money often disappears with little to show. The government should have a transparent online portal where every rupee spent by the panchayat is visible to all villagers.
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Aman W
Good speech, but we hear this every election cycle. The real test is whether a sarpanch who does substandard work or misuses funds will actually face consequences, or will it be business as usual with political connections saving them?
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Sarah B
Involving youth and using technology is the key. Many young people in villages are tech-savvy and want to contribute. Apps for grievance redressal and project monitoring can bring the transparency that is desperately needed.
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Karthik V
The focus on "last person in every village" is the correct spirit of Antyodaya. Development should be inclusive. Hope the training empowers sarpanches to ensure schemes like PM Awas Yojana truly reach the most needy, not just the politically connected.
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Nikhil C
Connecting all villages with at least two roads is a solid achievement under the Gram Sadak Yojana. Now maintaining that quality is the next challenge. Regular audits and community feedback mechanisms should be part of this new push.

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