
The official blueprint Goa currently follows is the Regional Plan 2001. It was notified in 1986, and today there is unanimity that this plan has become redundant. For two compelling reasons--both related to conserving the state's natural beauty, but with major implications for land use. First, the Coastal Regulation Zone notification of 1991 restricts development within 500 metres of coastal land as well as land along rivers, estuaries, bays and creeks (wherever tidal effects are left). In effect, says the state government, over 7,000 hectares (ha)--less than 2 per cent of the state's land area but its most valued real estate--is prohibited, or restricted. Then, in the 1990s, the Supreme Court directed even private lands be brought under the ambit of forest regulations. And, according to the Forest Survey of India, roughly 60 per cent of the state's area is forested.
Work on a new plan began in 1997.It wasn't merely a question of accounting for the two regulations the face of Goa's economy was changing, with tourism poised to grow and an upsurge in the real estate market. When it was notified nine years later, people cried foul, saying consultations were not held. Or, if held, incorporated changes suiting big business and real estate sharks. People alleged foul play and massive corruption in land deals, which would ravage the blue-green state and destroy the 'goose that lays the golden egg'--the tourism industry built on Goa's natural beauty.
The Revised Regional Plan Goa Perspective 2011, final draft report, is dated September 2003. It was outsourced by the state to Consulting Engineering Services (ces) Pvt Ltd, with headquarters in Delhi. The government says it was deliberated upon in meetings and seminars, before the Town and Country Planning Department--the state's nodal agency--considered it, and the cabinet approved it. In its affidavit to the High Court--where a case is being heard on the matter--the government has stated the draft regional plan was open to the public for comments for two months, which was extended by three weeks "though this three week period was neither required by statute nor under the law but only so the views of the public could be considered".
Only then was the final plan notified, on August 10, 2006.
Goa Bachao Abhiyan activists allege that the plan has been successively and deliberately changed to increase the area classified as urban. Between the existing plan (2001) and the draft plan (2011), they allege, the area has increased from 29,297 ha--which was classified as settlement--to 36,994 ha by the time of the draft plan 2011 and to 45,000 ha by the time the plan was notified.
Goa's total geographic area is 370,200 ha, which means that area under settlement has been increased from 8 per cent to 13 per cent of the land. To make their point clearly, citizens resisting the plan have prepared detailed maps of existing areas (see maps Arbitrary conversions) showing conversions in the surface utilisation map the government issued.
The latter was done "without any consultation with local communities and without their consent", according to a petition filed in the Panaji bench of the Mumbai High Court by Goa Heritage Action Group--a registered association of people concerned with Goa's natural and built architecture--and its office bearers, Dean D'Cruz and Heta Pandit.
Nauxi is a small village, close to the capital city of Panaji. People here are angry. They say the hill adjoining their homes is being
flattened. A builder has acquired the land and is constructing holiday homes, whose buyers are rumoured to be the most glamorous
faces of the country. How did the builder get the land? It gets murky hereafter, but it seems names of tenants were deleted in the
survey records. Powerful landlords and the local administration have apparently connived. But clearly, villagers were not consulted.
It requires governments to demarcate the high tide line and the different zones and then
administer the zones based on different realities as exist across the country. There are also ambiguities--what is a developed area or a
substantially developed area? Where is a road already proposed, but not built, where existing structures are allowed to build more, but
what was the existing already?
Goa's developers also dislike forest regulations. Goa is doubly blessed with forests. Roughly 62 per cent of its geographical area is
covered with forest and tree cover. But crucially, only 33 per cent of this is recorded forest area, that is, under forest department
control. The rest--roughly 210,000 ha--is forest land but not under government control. This land is not under the jurisdiction of the
Forest Conservation Act of 1980, but its use is guided by Supreme Court fiat. In the mid-1990s, the court re-defined the area under
forests, as defined under the dictionary, as 'land under trees'. Such land, though outside the forest department's reach, then came
under the ambit of conservation regulations.
Goa is a tourist paradise. But tourists need more than just sun and sand. In its defence of the Regional Plan, the government says, "Goa's economy was initially based on mining. Post-liberation, tourism picked up. But tourism is a fluctuating industry. To get tourists, you need infrastructure. Do we have enough resources for tourists?"
Mukund Gauns who owns about 4 ha of land in Caranzalem in Taleigao, used to grow paddy. "I grow vegetables now, I cannot cultivate paddy anymore because there is no drainage system. Now, I have to buy paddy to eat," Gauns told Down To Earth. N S Dumo, president of Goa Su Raj, a political party, is disturbed about land being usurped without adequate compensation. "Finding alternate means of employment is not easy either," he says.
We had to give up our land and we are now suffering," say Duttram Shirvoikar and Nona Shirvoikar, farmers evicted for the jogger's park. Another farmer-family was lucky to get compensation, but a paltry amount. "The minister gave us Rs 20,000 and he had the place sealed with mud. But the money is not enough. Agriculture sustained us much better. Now, we have to make do as labourers," says Bharati Shirvoikar, an affected farmer. Similarly, Mangala Adkonkar from Bambolim says her family had been asked to move out for a range of plush hotels by the Bambolim beach. "Everyone is scared but even then we are not willing to give up our land. Despite living by the sea, we cannot fish anymore. The route to the beach has been barricaded by builders. They come and threaten us showing the gun," she says.