Key Points

West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee's APAS scheme is gaining massive public traction just months before state elections. The program allocates Rs 10 lakh per polling booth to address local issues through weekly grievance camps. Opposition parties accuse the TMC of using public funds as pre-election inducements rather than sustainable welfare. Meanwhile, the scheme is building a comprehensive database of citizen grievances that could prove valuable during election planning.

Key Points: Mamata Banerjee APAS Scheme Delivers Rs 8000 Crore Before Bengal Polls

  • APAS scheme allocates Rs 10 lakh per polling booth for local issue resolution
  • Over 1 crore people visited 14,500 camps within a month of launch
  • Opposition BJP and CPI(M) label it a pre-election vote-bank ploy
  • Scheme builds real-time grievance database ahead of Assembly elections
3 min read

Will Mamata's booth-level APAS scheme deliver governance or votes?

West Bengal CM's booth-level APAS scheme allocates Rs 10 lakh per booth, drawing 1 crore citizens. Opposition calls it a pre-election vote-bank ploy amid welfare debate.

Will Mamata's booth-level APAS scheme deliver governance or votes?
"TMC’s booth revival strategy - Surjya Kanta Mishra, CPI(M) Leader"

Kolkata, Sep 10

West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee’s introduction of a new welfare scheme is fast turning out to be an immensely popular outreach months before the Assembly elections to be held next year.

The public response to “Amader Para, Amader Samadhan” (Our Neighbourhood, Our Solution) -- APAS in short -- has been overwhelming, with citizens flocking to camps in huge numbers.

The programme places a booth-level focus on resolving everyday local issues -- ranging from broken water taps and electric poles to playground and street repair -- by organising weekly camps in every polling-booth area across rural Bengal.

With a total outlay of around Rs 8,000 crore, each booth receives Rs 10 lakh -- to be allocated through real-time public deliberation at three-booth Janata Darbar camps. Government officials are accompanied by local representatives at camps to hear grievances and sanction projects with a pledge to begin work within 90 days.

APAS camps, which began on August 2, will go on till November 3.

Over one crore people visited about 14,500 camps within the month of its launch, say reports.

Not that the Opposition wasn’t aware of the political mileage Mamata’s flagship outreach initiative could garner.

Asserting that the scheme uses public funds as pre-election inducements rather than sustainable welfare measures, BJP West Bengal unit’s former president Dilip Ghosh has termed APAS “nothing but a carefully timed vote-bank ploy”.

The Opposition points out that the presence of local elected representatives with officials at such camps clearly proves TMC’s intent. They argue that similar outreach has not yet been held at the few panchayats or municipalities where the Opposition is strong.

Neither will that ever be held, they claim.

However, according to senior journalist Biswajit Bhattacharjee, who was present at one such camp held at Kolkata Corporation Ward No. 5, no local elected representative, like a councillor, was present.

“There were local authorities, and Kolkata Corporation staff, one of whom attended to public grievances, another fed the data on a computer,” recalled Bhattacharjee.

“Most complaints were over waterlogging, street lights, parked cars blocking streets, among others,” he added.

He feels that usually such complainants refrain from going to the councillor, fearing a reprimand. “Because, in a way, the complaint is about an elected representative’s ineptitude,” he added.

However, he pointed out, the exercise is allowing the administration to build a database that can provide inputs at the poll-planning stage.

A senior leader of the Communist Party of India (Marxist), Surjya Kanta Mishra, labeled the scheme “TMC’s booth revival strategy,” arguing that channeling Rs 10 lakh per booth is unsustainable and undermines genuine decentralised planning.

The Opposition has also claimed that the state government is trying to “divert attention” from allegations of corruption, nepotism, and breakdown in law-and-order situation in the state.

Meanwhile, APAS augments earlier programmes like “Duare Sarkar” (government at doorstep) -- where people can avail facilities at home. Add to this dole handouts to senior citizens, women, the girlchild, etc., and so on.

And, of course, with Bengal preparing for its biggest festival of Durga Puja later this month, the honorarium per club -- or organiser -- has been raised to Rs 1.1 lakh. This is almost a 30 per cent increase from the Rs 85,000 given last year.

Considering around 45,000 such “clubs” in the state, the pressure on its exchequer can well be imagined.

But then, the line between welfare schemes and freebies has already been blurred in the country.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Election season freebies are becoming the norm across all parties. While the intention might be good, Rs 8000 crore is taxpayer money - hope there's proper accountability and not just political messaging
A
Aditya G
The timing is suspiciously close to elections, but if it solves real problems like waterlogging and broken infrastructure, does the timing really matter? Better late than never!
S
Sarah B
As someone working in urban planning, I appreciate the booth-level approach. Local problems need local solutions. Hope this becomes a model for other states too 🤞
V
Vikram M
The real test will be whether work actually begins within 90 days as promised. Too many schemes announce big numbers but delivery on ground remains poor. Let's see actual results, not just announcements.
K
Karthik V
Between Duare Sarkar, APAS, increased Durga Puja funds, and various doles - the spending is massive. While welfare is important, hope the state finances can sustain this long-term without burdening future generations

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