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Maharashtra Emergency Earthquake Rehabilitation Programme, 1993-1999

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... another 200,000 suffered damages of varying degrees 52 Villages razed to ground 1500 villages damaged by earthquake Latur and Osmanabad districts badly ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Maharashtra Emergency Earthquake Rehabilitation Programme, 1993-1999


1
Maharashtra Emergency Earthquake Rehabilitation
Programme, 1993-1999
  • Krishna S. Vatsa
  • Relief and Rehabilitation
  • Government of Maharashtra

2
The earthquake
  • September 30, 1993 356 am
  • 6.3 on Richter scale
  • Epicentre near Killari, Latur district
  • 8,000 people killed, 16,000 injured
  • 25,000 houses collapsed, another 200,000 suffered
    damages of varying degrees
  • 52 Villages razed to ground
  • 1500 villages damaged by earthquake
  • Latur and Osmanabad districts badly affected, 11
    other districts also affected by the earthquake

3

4
Main Features
  • A rural earthquake in a relatively backward
    agricultural region
  • Density of deaths very high 8,000 deaths in 52
    villages
  • A deep sense of devastation and trauma
  • Houses collapsed due to poor building practices
    uncoursed stones, poor masonry, thick walls, and
    heavy roof
  • 25,000 houses collapsed, another 1,90,000
    suffered damage of varying degrees in about 2,500
    villages
  • Economic losses not very heavy
  • Total Damage assessment US300 million

5
Financing Reconstruction and Rehabilitation
  • Total Cost of Reconstruction and Rehabilitation
    US358 Million
  • World Bank Credit US 221 million (62 percent)
  • Government of Maharashtra US 96 million (27
    percent)
  • Donors (DfID, UNDP, ADB and External donors) US
    41 million (11 percent)

6
Reconstruction and Rehabilitation
  • Focus on Housing (220,000 Units)
  • Infrastructure (Roads, Bridges, Water Supply,
    Drainage and Sewerage)
  • Social, Economic, and Community Rehabilitation
  • Technical Assistance (Project Management, IEC,
    Disaster Management)

7
Basic Scheme of Rehabilitation
  • Relocation of 52 most affected villages in Latur
    and Osmanabad districts A Category
  • In-situ reconstruction of 22 villages in Latur
    and Osmanabad (they were eventually relocated) B
    Category
  • Repairs and Strengthening of houses in 1500
    villages spread over 11 districts C Category

8
Peoples Entitlements
  • Core houses in A Category (250, 400, and 750
    Square feet) according to land ownership
  • Rs. 62,000 to each beneficiary for reconstruction
    of their individual houses
  • Rs. 17,000 and Rs. 34,500 for repairs,
    reconstruction and strengthening of houses

9
Initial Difficulties
  • Rushed reconstruction
  • Inappropriate designs pushed by NGOs
  • Quality Control became an issue
  • Communities bargaining with NGOs
  • Government stepped in
  • Pre-approval of house designs
  • Supervision of NGOs reconstruction
  • In-situ reconstruction Repairs and
    Strengthening a non-starter

10
Reconstruction Strategy A Category (52
Villages)
  • Complete abandonment of old sites
  • Acquisition of land for relocation sites
  • Layout, Design and bid preparation by engineering
    consultants
  • Tendering for reconstruction
  • Consultations with the community
  • New layout of villages
  • Houses on the basis of nucleus families
  • Decongestion, but increase in sprawl
  • Increase in length of internal roads and storm
    water drains

11
Accomplishments and Limitations
  • Construction of 28,000 houses
  • Low-income groups net beneficiaries
    house-ownership a positive outcome
  • Women found new houses easier to clean and
    maintain
  • Houses brought a new life-style with increase in
    possession of consumer durables
  • A mixed record on adaptation to new houses and
    life in relocated villages
  • No intermix of communities Different caste
    groups retained their exclusive identity
  • Quality Control always an issue both in
    government as well as NGOs construction An
    outcome of community participation
  • Civic amenities varying levels of satisfaction
  • Limitations to community participation, which
    reduced the level of satisfaction

12
In-situ Reconstruction B Category (22
villages)
  • Work was stalled for more than two years
  • People wanted relocation
  • Government finally accepted relocation
  • Six villages joined the category later
  • NGOs purchased the land
  • Construction largely through NGOs (About 10,000
    houses)
  • Layout and design through extensive community
    consultations
  • Lesser civic amenities in terms of internal roads
    and sewerage
  • A contested process, but a higher level of
    satisfaction

13
Repairs and StrengtheningC Category (1500
villages)
  • Largest category of program (180,000 houses in
    1500 villages across 11 districts)
  • Owner-driven construction
  • Disbursement of financial assistance in
    installments linked to physical progress
  • Distribution of building material through depots
    set up by governments
  • Extensive supervision through engineers at the
    village-level

14
Accomplishments and Limitations
  • Started almost two years later, but finished
    within one to two years
  • It acquired the dimension of a housing movement
  • People used the assistance to increase living
    space and renew their houses
  • Families participation in reconstruction
  • They brought their own savings
  • A very high level of satisfaction
  • Focus on housing not much was done for improving
    civic and community facilities

15
Relocation vs. In-situ Reconstruction
  • Improving the habitat, not reconstruction, the
    main goal
  • Choice between in-situ reconstruction and
    relocation should be guided by this goal
  • In-situ reconstruction is a better and cheaper
    choice, but relocation is at times unavoidable
    (decongestion, difficulties in clearing debris,
    psychological trauma)
  • An ideal situation is one which combines the
    positive features of both the options
  • Which means in-situ reconstruction on a bigger
    plot, better layout and architectural design,
    stronger foundations, more decongested
    environment

16
Contractor-driven vs. Owner-driven Reconstruction
  • Owner-driven construction a better choice a
    better utilization of resources and greater
    control and supervision over reconstruction
  • It may not be feasible for many families which
    lost their adult members
  • Government required to provide housing to
    socially handicapped people, and hence
    contractor-driven strategy remains relevant
  • Necessary to make this choice based on
    communities needs, their capacities and
    vulnerabilities

17

Reconstruction vs. Retrofitting Strategy
  • In the Repairs and Strengthening Category,
    construction of additional rooms and increased
    their living space
  • Retrofitting of houses not really a priority
  • Retrofitting involves complex techniques, closer
    supervision, and may not be feasible in a
    large-scale program
  • Community needs should be guiding factor

18
Lessons at Program Level
  • Focus on resettlement planning and architecture
    rather than earthquake engineering
  • Dynamic response to emerging community
    perceptions flexibility and innovation required
  • A strong institutional framework of consultations
    with the communities
  • Increasing communities stakeholding through
    their financial and work contribution

19
Lessons at Project Level
  • Strong project leadership
  • Building a committed project team
  • A well-developed framework of partnership with
    donors and NGOs
  • Well-established institutional mechanisms and
    procedures for implementation
  • Secure budget lines
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