Key Points

The Punjab Cabinet has approved a special measure letting farmers remove sand and silt deposited by floods on their land. Farmers can also choose to sell this material without requiring any mining permits. This one-time policy follows the principle "Jisda Khet, Usda Rait" meaning whoever owns the land owns the sand. The government aims to help farmers recover from flood damage while providing additional compensation.

Key Points: Bhagwant Mann Cabinet Allows Farmers to Sell Flood Sand Silt

  • Farmers can remove accumulated sand/silt from flood-affected fields without permits
  • Policy allows farmers to sell the collected sand if they wish
  • Measure valid for all affected villages until December 31 this year
  • State government also providing compensation up to Rs 20,000 per acre
3 min read

Punjab Cabinet allows farmers to remove sand, silt accumulated with floods

Punjab Cabinet approves farmers removing and selling flood-deposited sand/silt from their fields without permits until December 31 under new "pro-people" measure.

"Therefore, in a major reprieve to the farmers it has been decided that farmers will be allowed to remove sand and silt from their own fields - Chief Minister's Office Spokesperson"

Chandigarh, Sep 8

The Punjab Cabinet led by the Chief Minister Bhagwant Mann, on Monday, gave its approval to one-time 'pro-people' measure to enable farmers to remove sand and silt accumulated due to floods in their fields and sell them if they desire.

A decision to this effect was taken by the Council of Ministers at its meeting held here under the chairmanship of the Chief Minister, who joined it virtually from Fortis hospital, where he has been undergoing treatment.

A Spokesperson for the Chief Minister's Office said that due to the floods, sand and silt have accumulated in several fields at the inundated villages.

"Therefore, in a major reprieve to the farmers it has been decided that farmers will be allowed to remove sand and silt from their own fields, and they may sell it if they wish."

Under the policy of "Jisda Khet, Usda Rait" (One who owns the land, owns the sand), farmers in all flood-affected villages will be allowed to remove sand from their land without any permit by December 31.

The removal of silt, sand and river borne material from agricultural land by way of this "one-time measure" would not be considered mining of mineral.

The Deputy Commissioner concerned would declare the list of affected villages in a district where the operation of removal and lifting of deposited material may be done by the affected farmers, cultivators and group of farmers affected by flood material deposition.

The Cabinet also decided that the state government will provide compensation of up to Rs 20,000 per acre, which is not the highest in the history of Punjab, but it is the highest in the entire country.

"This is in consonance with the commitment of the state government to bail out the farmers of Punjab in this hour of grave crisis," the Spokesperson added.

The Cabinet approved amendment to the Punjab Town Improvement Act, 1922, to enable urban local bodies to utilise funds of the Improvement Trusts through the Municipal Development Fund, which was established by the state government to undertake urban infrastructure works for which allocation is received from the state Budget every year.

The Cabinet also granted prosecution sanction against former Punjab Minister Bikram Singh Majithia under Section 19 of the Prevention of Corruption Act of 1988.

As per advice of the Advocate General, the matter with regard to granting of prosecution sanction of the former Minister first needs to be discussed in the Council of Ministers and thereafter it will be sent to the Governor for passing of formal order.

The Cabinet also gave signal to the Custom Milling Policy for Kharif Marketing Season 2025-26 starting from September 16 and the procurement of paddy would be completed up to November 30.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
This is a practical solution, but Rs 20,000 per acre compensation seems inadequate given the scale of damage. Many farmers have lost their entire crop. Hope the government reviews this amount.
H
Harsh A
Great move! Farmers can now clear their fields AND earn from the sand. Double benefit. Hope the process is made simple without too much bureaucracy. December 31 deadline should be extended if needed.
S
Sarah B
Interesting policy. In other countries, such natural disaster recovery takes months of paperwork. Here they're making it simple and practical. Hope the implementation is smooth on ground level.
V
Vikram M
Good initiative but who will monitor that only affected farmers benefit? There might be misuse by sand mafia pretending to be farmers. DCs need to be very careful in identifying genuine cases.
A
Ananya R
Finally some relief for our annadata! The floods destroyed everything, but at least now they can recover something from the situation. Hope the government also provides proper machinery support for removal.

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