Centre Cracks Down on States: Jal Jeevan Mission's Shocking Performance Gaps

The Centre has intensified monitoring of the Jal Jeevan Mission following extensive ground verification. Inspections revealed significant gaps in mega water supply schemes, with 26% found non-functional. States have been directed to address implementation weaknesses and expedite pending irregularity cases. The crackdown has already resulted in departmental proceedings, contractor blacklisting, and legal actions across 20 states.

Key Points: Centre Tightens Jal Jeevan Mission Monitoring Over State Lapses

  • 26% of mega water supply schemes found completely non-functional during inspections
  • 579 departmental proceedings initiated against officials for irregularities
  • 236 contractors blacklisted and 116 contracts terminated for violations
  • Single-village schemes perform better with 94% regular water supply
  • Centre directs states to expedite pending cases before vigilance bodies
  • Action includes 12 suspensions and penalties on 531 officials
3 min read

Centre tightens screws on states over lapses in Jal Jeevan Mission

287 central officers inspect 473 villages, revealing 26% mega schemes non-functional. States directed to address gaps amid corruption crackdown involving officials and contractors.

"Transparency and accountability remain non-negotiable pillars of the scheme - Prime Minister Narendra Modi"

New Delhi, November 25

The Jal Jeevan Mission (JJM) has come under intense scrutiny as 287 central nodal officers, appointed at the direction of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, carried out extensive ground verification of mega and single-village water supply projects across nearly 473 villages, covering schemes worth close to Rs 1.30 lakh crore.

The inspections were conducted as part of the Centre's push for strict monitoring and a zero-tolerance stance toward financial, procedural and quality-related violations under the mission.

According to officials, the states have been repeatedly instructed to ensure that every complaint is examined promptly, field verification is carried out without delay, and all required disciplinary, contractual, and legal actions are taken without exception. Transparency and accountability remain non-negotiable pillars of the scheme, as the Prime Minister emphasised.

Feedback submitted by the central nodal officers revealed significant functionality gaps in mega water supply schemes, where 68 per cent of the villages inspected reported regular water supply, 6 per cent reported irregular supply, and 26 per cent were found to be non-functional.

The deficiencies were largely attributed to delays in commissioning, maintenance issues, and shortages of trained staff. In contrast, single-village schemes showed stronger performance, with 94 per cent of villages reporting regular water supply and only 2 per cent found to be non-functional.

Following the identification of gaps, the Centre directed states to address critical observations, rectify implementation weaknesses, and submit action-taken reports. Chief Secretaries of all states were formally asked to expedite pending irregularity cases, particularly those before vigilance bodies such as the Anti-Corruption Bureau, Lokayukta, and others.

ANI has learnt that 20 states--including Assam, Chhattisgarh, Gujarat, Haryana, Jharkhand, Karnataka, Kerala, Ladakh, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Manipur, Meghalaya, Odisha, Rajasthan, Tripura, Tamil Nadu, Uttar Pradesh, Punjab, and West Bengal--have reported cases of irregularities and submitted action-taken details in 607 cases involving 621 departmental officials, 969 contractors, and 153 third-party inspection agencies.

Action taken so far includes 579 departmental proceedings, 12 suspensions, penalties imposed on 531 officials, blacklisting or debarment of 236 contractors, termination of 116 contracts, and the removal of 143 officials from third-party inspection roles. Further, nine FIRs have been registered against 20 officials, 10 contractors, and one TPIA. Arrests include one former minister, 10 officials, and eight contractors.

Prime Minister Modi has repeatedly emphasised that there should be zero tolerance for corruption. JJM was launched in 2019 to ensure drinking water for every rural household. At the time of its launch, only 3.23 per cent of rural households had tap water connections. As of November 2025, 15.7 crore rural households have been provided tap water connections under the mission.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Rajesh Q
The numbers are shocking - 26% non-functional mega schemes? This is public money being wasted. Glad to see action being taken against contractors and officials. Hope this sets an example for other government schemes too.
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Sarah B
While I appreciate the crackdown on corruption, I hope this doesn't become another case of central government overreach. States need autonomy to implement schemes according to local conditions. The one-size-fits-all approach rarely works in India's diversity.
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Arjun K
From 3.23% to 15.7 crore households - that's incredible progress in just 6 years! 🎉 Yes, there are issues, but we should also acknowledge the scale of achievement. Clean drinking water is a basic right and JJM is making it happen.
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Kavya N
The difference between mega schemes (68% functional) and single-village schemes (94% functional) is telling. Maybe we need to rethink the mega project approach and focus more on localized solutions that are easier to maintain and monitor.
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Michael C
As someone working in development sector, I appreciate the transparency in reporting these numbers. The fact that they're publicly acknowledging the problems and taking action is a positive step. More schemes need this level of accountability.
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Nisha Z
My grandmother in rural UP

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