Bilaspur High Court Slams PWD Over Road Delays in Chhattisgarh
Digital Desk
The Chhattisgarh High Court expressed strong displeasure over road construction delays in Bilaspur, directing PWD and civic officials to submit progress reports with timelines.
Chhattisgarh High Court Raps PWD Over Bilaspur Road Delays
Public Cannot Be Made to Suffer Over Procedural Delays, Court Says
Court Takes Strong Exception
The Chhattisgarh High Court has come down hard on the Public Works Department (PWD) over persistent delays in road construction across Bilaspur, warning that procedural formalities cannot be used as a shield to keep citizens in distress. A Division Bench comprising Chief Justice Ramesh Sinha and Justice Ravindra Kumar Agarwal heard the matter and made clear that essential public infrastructure cannot be held hostage to bureaucratic processes.
PIL Taken Up Suo Motu
The court took up the issue as a public interest litigation after media reports highlighted the deteriorating condition of roads in the city. Treating the news coverage as sufficient grounds to intervene, the Division Bench initiated proceedings and called upon the authorities to explain why work had stalled or moved at a sluggish pace. The bench underscored that delays in basic civic amenities like motorable roads directly affect the daily lives of ordinary residents.
PWD Tables Status Report
During the hearing, the PWD's Superintending Engineer submitted a status report along with an affidavit, revealing that tenders worth ₹44.59 crore were still caught in procedural stages. As per the report, a tender of approximately ₹40.38 crore for the Pendridih to Nehru Chowk stretch — spanning 15.37 kilometres — was issued on April 9, with May 4 set as the last date for submissions.
For the Devkinandan Chowk to Mahamaya Chowk stretch of 1.30 kilometres, tenders worth around ₹1.84 crore had been invited with a deadline of April 15. Meanwhile, technical approval for the Nehru Chowk to Uslapur corridor of 3.20 kilometres — a project valued at ₹4.20 crore — has been secured, and the draft Notice Inviting Tender (NIT) has been dispatched for further processing.
Civic Body Updates Court on Ground Progress
The Municipal Commissioner submitted a separate affidavit informing the court that tarring work along the Apollo Chowk to Mansi Guest House route has been completed. Additionally, shifting of electricity poles and drainage construction between Rajkishore Nagar Chowk and Sant Vihar Chowk up to Apollo Chowk are also reported as done.
Currently, work between Mansi Guest House and Rapata Chowk is ongoing, with officials citing encroachment removal and tree transplantation as activities in progress. The court took note of these updates but refrained from treating partial completions as satisfactory given the broader scale of pending work.
Court Sets Firm Accountability Frame
The bench has directed both the Municipal Commissioner and the PWD's Executive Engineer to appear before the court with detailed progress reports ahead of the next hearing. These reports must include a clear timeline for completing the pending stretches. The court left no ambiguity — officials are expected to move beyond submitting status notes and demonstrate concrete execution on the ground.Industrial Bodies Also Called to Account
Beyond road infrastructure, the High Court has extended its scrutiny to matters related to industrial development in the region. The Division Bench directed the Managing Director of the Chhattisgarh State Industrial Development Corporation (CSIDC) and the General Manager of the District Trade and Industries Centre to file personal affidavits in the case. Both officials will need to respond with sworn statements before the next date of hearing.
What Comes Next
The matter is set to come up for hearing again shortly, with multiple departments now under the court's watchful eye. According to sources, the court's intervention has prompted officials at various levels to fast-track at least some of the stalled tenders. However, residents and civic activists say on-ground improvement remains the true benchmark — and that, as of now, much of Bilaspur's road network continues to test the patience of its daily commuters.
With the Bilaspur High Court maintaining pressure through direct judicial oversight, this road construction delay case has become a significant marker of how courts in India are increasingly stepping in where routine governance has fallen short on delivering basic civic amenities.
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Bilaspur High Court Slams PWD Over Road Delays in Chhattisgarh
Digital Desk
Chhattisgarh High Court Raps PWD Over Bilaspur Road Delays
Public Cannot Be Made to Suffer Over Procedural Delays, Court Says
Court Takes Strong Exception
The Chhattisgarh High Court has come down hard on the Public Works Department (PWD) over persistent delays in road construction across Bilaspur, warning that procedural formalities cannot be used as a shield to keep citizens in distress. A Division Bench comprising Chief Justice Ramesh Sinha and Justice Ravindra Kumar Agarwal heard the matter and made clear that essential public infrastructure cannot be held hostage to bureaucratic processes.
PIL Taken Up Suo Motu
The court took up the issue as a public interest litigation after media reports highlighted the deteriorating condition of roads in the city. Treating the news coverage as sufficient grounds to intervene, the Division Bench initiated proceedings and called upon the authorities to explain why work had stalled or moved at a sluggish pace. The bench underscored that delays in basic civic amenities like motorable roads directly affect the daily lives of ordinary residents.
PWD Tables Status Report
During the hearing, the PWD's Superintending Engineer submitted a status report along with an affidavit, revealing that tenders worth ₹44.59 crore were still caught in procedural stages. As per the report, a tender of approximately ₹40.38 crore for the Pendridih to Nehru Chowk stretch — spanning 15.37 kilometres — was issued on April 9, with May 4 set as the last date for submissions.
For the Devkinandan Chowk to Mahamaya Chowk stretch of 1.30 kilometres, tenders worth around ₹1.84 crore had been invited with a deadline of April 15. Meanwhile, technical approval for the Nehru Chowk to Uslapur corridor of 3.20 kilometres — a project valued at ₹4.20 crore — has been secured, and the draft Notice Inviting Tender (NIT) has been dispatched for further processing.
Civic Body Updates Court on Ground Progress
The Municipal Commissioner submitted a separate affidavit informing the court that tarring work along the Apollo Chowk to Mansi Guest House route has been completed. Additionally, shifting of electricity poles and drainage construction between Rajkishore Nagar Chowk and Sant Vihar Chowk up to Apollo Chowk are also reported as done.
Currently, work between Mansi Guest House and Rapata Chowk is ongoing, with officials citing encroachment removal and tree transplantation as activities in progress. The court took note of these updates but refrained from treating partial completions as satisfactory given the broader scale of pending work.
Court Sets Firm Accountability Frame
The bench has directed both the Municipal Commissioner and the PWD's Executive Engineer to appear before the court with detailed progress reports ahead of the next hearing. These reports must include a clear timeline for completing the pending stretches. The court left no ambiguity — officials are expected to move beyond submitting status notes and demonstrate concrete execution on the ground.Industrial Bodies Also Called to Account
Beyond road infrastructure, the High Court has extended its scrutiny to matters related to industrial development in the region. The Division Bench directed the Managing Director of the Chhattisgarh State Industrial Development Corporation (CSIDC) and the General Manager of the District Trade and Industries Centre to file personal affidavits in the case. Both officials will need to respond with sworn statements before the next date of hearing.
What Comes Next
The matter is set to come up for hearing again shortly, with multiple departments now under the court's watchful eye. According to sources, the court's intervention has prompted officials at various levels to fast-track at least some of the stalled tenders. However, residents and civic activists say on-ground improvement remains the true benchmark — and that, as of now, much of Bilaspur's road network continues to test the patience of its daily commuters.
With the Bilaspur High Court maintaining pressure through direct judicial oversight, this road construction delay case has become a significant marker of how courts in India are increasingly stepping in where routine governance has fallen short on delivering basic civic amenities.