Key Points

The Himachal Pradesh High Court has issued a stern warning to a contractor over excessive delays in completing the Kupvi Community Health Centre. Despite the project being awarded in 2018 with a 2020 deadline, construction remains incomplete after more than five years. The court rejected the contractor's COVID-19 pandemic excuse, noting that restrictions eased over three years ago. Residents continue to suffer without basic medical services while the project remains stalled.

Key Points: Himachal High Court Orders Kupvi Health Centre Completion in Two Months

  • Court rejects contractor's COVID-19 delay excuse as inadequate explanation
  • Rs 18.06 lakh penalty already imposed on contractor for delays
  • Project awarded in 2018 with original 2020 completion deadline
  • Residents deprived of basic medical services due to prolonged delay
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Himachal High Court warns contractor over delay in Kupvi Health Centre Project, orders completion in two months

Himachal High Court warns contractor over 5-year delay in Kupvi Health Centre project, orders completion within 60 days or face contract termination and penalties.

"The people of Kupvi have been adversely affected by the non-completion of the health centre - Himachal High Court Bench"

Shimla, August 28

The Himachal Pradesh High Court has pulled up a contractor for the prolonged delay in completing the Community Health Centre (CHC) building at Kupvi in Shimla district's Chopal Tehsil, and has directed that the project be completed within two months, failing which the contract will be terminated.

A division bench comprising Chief Justice GS Sandhawalia and Justice Ranjan Sharma passed the order while hearing Pradeep Kumar vs State of HP and others (CWPIL No. 7 of 2025). The court noted that the contract, originally awarded on February 2, 2018, was scheduled for completion by February 17, 2020. However, despite the lapse of more than five years, the construction remains incomplete.

As per records submitted by the State on August 14 and 17, 2025, a penalty of 10 per cent, amounting to Rs 18.06 lakh, has already been imposed on the contractor under Clause 3 of the contract agreement. The State has also recommended the termination of the contract and recovery of liquidated damages from the contractor's security deposit if the work is not completed within the stipulated period.

While counsel for the contractor (Respondent No. 9) argued that the COVID-19 pandemic had caused delays, the court rejected this as an adequate explanation, pointing out that more than three and a half years had passed since pandemic restrictions eased.

Taking note of the contractor's undertaking to complete the work within two months, the court warned that failure to meet the deadline would result in termination and the engagement of a new contractor.

Expressing concern over the plight of residents, the bench observed that the people of Kupvi had been "adversely affected" by the non-completion of the health centre, depriving them of basic medical services.

The court further directed the State to ensure adequate staffing in the region to meet the healthcare needs of the population.

The matter has been listed for further hearing on October 29, 2025.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
COVID excuse doesn't hold water anymore. The pandemic ended years ago! This is just typical contractor negligence. Hope the court follows through with termination if they miss the deadline again.
A
Aditya G
Good that the court is taking this seriously. But why did it take 5+ years for authorities to act? The monitoring system clearly failed. We need better accountability at every level - from contractors to officials.
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Meera T
As someone from Himachal, I know how crucial these health centres are for mountain communities. People have to travel hours for basic medical care. This delay is unacceptable! 🏔️
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Sarah B
The penalty of 18 lakh seems too little for a 5-year delay. The contractor probably made more money by delaying than paying the penalty. The system needs stronger disincentives for such delays.
Karthik V
Hope they also ensure proper staffing as the court directed. What's the point of building infrastructure if there are no doctors and nurses? Complete solution needed, not just construction.

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