SC suggests PMAY benefits for Haldwani occupants
SC Suggests PMAY Benefits for Haldwani Occupants
UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note | GS-II & GS-III
1. At a Glance
- The Supreme Court of India (February 25, 2026) directed Uttarakhand officials to conduct camps encouraging ~50,000 occupants of Railway land near Haldwani to apply under Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana (PMAY) for rehabilitation. [S1]
- The case sits at the intersection of land encroachment on public/Railway land, forced eviction jurisprudence, right to shelter, and welfare scheme delivery to informal settlers. [S1]
- Tests the constitutional and policy balance between infrastructure development imperatives (Railways) and humanitarian obligations to long-term occupants. [S1]
- Directly relevant to GS-II (Social Justice, Vulnerable Groups, Judiciary) and GS-III (Infrastructure, Housing Policy). [S1][S2]
2. Why in the News
- February 25, 2026: A Supreme Court Bench headed by Chief Justice of India Surya Kant (with Justice Joymalya Bagchi) directed Uttarakhand officials and the State Legal Services Authority (SLSA) to run camps so that ~50,000 occupants of Railway land in Haldwani can apply for PMAY benefits. [S1]
- The Railways seek reclamation of over 30 hectares of public land near railway tracks to lay new tracks — partly necessitated by flooding from the Ghaula River disrupting railway operations. [S1]
- ~5,000 families who have occupied this land for ~50 years face eviction. [S1]
- Advocates Prashant Bhushan and Neh Rathi appeared for the occupants; Additional Solicitor-General Aishwarya Bhati appeared for the Railways. [S1]
3. Background & Evolution
- Haldwani (Uttarakhand) is described as the "doorway to the hills" — a key transit node on the railway network leading into the Kumaon Himalayan region. [S1]
- The occupants have lived on the land for approximately half a century (~50 years), creating a de facto urban settlement on Railway-owned public land. [S1]
- The Haldwani eviction matter has been before courts for several years; earlier in 2023, the Uttarakhand High Court ordered demolition of structures — triggering nationwide attention and subsequent Supreme Court interventions.
- PMAY was launched in 2015 (Urban) and 2016 (Rural/Gramin) as the flagship housing scheme to achieve Housing for All. [S2]
- PMAY-Urban 2.0 was approved by Cabinet as a successor scheme (announced in Union Budget 2024-25) targeting 1 crore additional urban houses over five years with ₹10 lakh crore investment and ₹2.30 lakh crore central subsidy. [S2][S3]
4. Core Static Facts
PMAY — Key Parameters
| Parameter | PMAY-Urban (PMAY-U) 2.0 | PMAY-Gramin (PMAY-G) |
|---|---|---|
| Launch | 2015 (original); 2.0 announced 2024 | 2016 |
| Implementing Ministry | Ministry of Housing & Urban Affairs (MoHUA) | Ministry of Rural Development |
| Target | 1 crore urban houses (PMAY-U 2.0) | 3.21 crore sanctioned (as of Nov 2024) |
| Central Outlay | ₹2.30 lakh crore subsidy; ₹10 lakh crore total investment | — |
| EWS Income ceiling | ≤ ₹3 lakh/year | — |
| LIG Income ceiling | ₹3–6 lakh/year | — |
| MIG Income ceiling | ₹6–9 lakh/year | — |
| Completion (PMAY-G) | — | 2.67 crore houses completed (as of Nov 2024) [S4] |
Haldwani Case — Key Parameters
- Location: Near railway tracks, Haldwani, Uttarakhand
- Land type: Public land (Railway land)
- Area in dispute: >30 hectares
- Affected persons: ~50,000 individuals (~5,000 families)
- Duration of occupation: ~50 years
- SC Bench: CJI Surya Kant + Justice Joymalya Bagchi [S1]
- Rehabilitation suggestion: PMAY benefits + alternative land acquisition by State instead of monetary compensation [S1]
- Key river: Ghaula River (flooding disrupts railway operations) [S1]
Legal / Statutory Framework
- Right to shelter: Derived from Article 21 (Right to Life) — SC has consistently held shelter is integral to dignified life.
- Railway land: Governed by the Railways Act, 1989; encroachment on railway land is a cognisable offence.
- PMAY: Administrative scheme under MoHUA; no dedicated parent statute — implemented via executive orders and annual budget allocations.
- State Legal Services Authority (SLSA): Constituted under Legal Services Authorities Act, 1987 — tasked here with outreach/camp organisation. [S1]
- Exclusion criteria (PMAY-G): Kisan Credit Card holders (limit ≥ ₹50,000), government employees, households with monthly income >₹15,000, households with refrigerators, landline phones, or irrigated land are excluded. [S5]
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Legal / Constitutional
- The SC's observation — "This is public land… it is illegal to encroach on public land" — reaffirms that long-term occupation does not confer ownership or adverse possession rights against the State/Railway on public land. [S1]
- Justice Bagchi explicitly framed rehabilitation as a "concession, not a right" — important jurisprudential signal limiting expansive readings of Article 21 shelter rights in encroachment contexts. [S1]
- The suggestion to use PMAY for in-kind rehabilitation (house construction) rather than cash compensation aligns with SC's broader preference for restorative over compensatory remedies in displacement cases.
Social
- ~5,000 families (~50,000 persons) are EWS/LIG urban poor who have built livelihoods over 50 years — displacement carries severe social disruption risks. [S1]
- Likely presence of SC/ST, minority, and widow-headed households among occupants — PMAY-U 2.0 specifically prioritises these groups. [S2][S3]
- The SLSA camp mechanism ensures legal outreach to marginalised groups who may lack awareness of or access to scheme benefits.
Administrative
- The SC's direction to the State (not Railways) to acquire alternative land for rehabilitation reveals the federal-functional split: Railways controls land reclamation; State government controls housing/rehabilitation policy. [S1]
- PMAY camp model — deploying SLSA for on-ground application facilitation — is a significant administrative innovation for reaching informal settlers.
- Challenge: PMAY-U eligibility requires the applicant to not own a pucca house anywhere in India — verifying this for 50,000 displaced persons is a logistical and administrative bottleneck.
Economic
- Railways cites Ghaula River flooding as a recurrent operational disruption — new track infrastructure is needed for the strategic Kumaon rail corridor. [S1]
- PMAY-U 2.0 mobilises ₹10 lakh crore total investment including private sector — rehabilitation under this scheme shifts fiscal burden from Railways to the housing welfare apparatus. [S2][S3]
- In-kind housing (PMAY) rather than cash compensation prevents speculative dissipation of displacement funds by beneficiaries.
Ethical / Governance
- Tension between rule of law (public land cannot be encroached, however long) and humanitarian equity (50 years of occupation creates moral claims). [S1]
- SC's balanced approach — affirming illegality while directing welfare access — models equity-sensitive rule of law enforcement.
- Risk of moral hazard: proactive PMAY facilitation for encroachers could incentivise future encroachments if not accompanied by strong deterrence messaging.
6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)
- August 2024: Cabinet approved PMAY-Urban 2.0, targeting 1 crore houses with ₹10 lakh crore investment over 5 years; announced in Union Budget 2024-25. [S3]
- November 2024: PMAY-G reported 2.67 crore houses completed out of 3.21 crore sanctioned. [S4]
- December 2024: 2.35 lakh houses approved under PMAY-Urban 2.0 during the 3rd meeting of the Central Sanctioning and Monitoring Committee (CSMC). [S6]
- February 25, 2026: Supreme Court (CJI Surya Kant Bench) directs Uttarakhand + SLSA to conduct camps for Haldwani occupants to apply under PMAY; suggests State acquire alternative land for rehabilitation instead of cash compensation. [S1]
7. Prelims Hooks
- PMAY-Urban 2.0 was approved by the Cabinet as announced in Union Budget 2024-25, targeting 1 crore houses over 5 years. [S3]
- Total investment mobilised under PMAY-Urban 2.0: ₹10 lakh crore; central government subsidy: ₹2.30 lakh crore. [S2][S3]
- PMAY-Gramin is implemented by the Ministry of Rural Development (not MoHUA). [S4]
- PMAY-Urban is implemented by the Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs (MoHUA). [S2]
- As of November 2024, PMAY-G has completed 2.67 crore houses out of 3.21 crore sanctioned. [S4]
- EWS eligibility ceiling under PMAY-Urban 2.0: annual household income ≤ ₹3 lakh. [S2]
- State Legal Services Authority (SLSA) is constituted under the Legal Services Authorities Act, 1987. [S1]
- The Haldwani Railway land in dispute covers >30 hectares and is occupied by ~5,000 families (~50,000 persons). [S1]
- The Supreme Court Bench in the Haldwani case is headed by Chief Justice of India Surya Kant, with Justice Joymalya Bagchi. [S1]
- The SC ruled that long-term occupation of public land confers a "concession, not a right" — reinforcing that adverse possession does not apply against the State on public land. [S1]
- Ghaula River flooding was cited by Additional Solicitor-General Aishwarya Bhati as the operational reason Railways urgently needs the Haldwani land. [S1]
- Under PMAY-G, households with Kisan Credit Card limits ≥ ₹50,000 are automatically excluded from benefits. [S5]
- 2.35 lakh houses were approved under PMAY-Urban 2.0 at the 3rd CSMC meeting (December 2024). [S6]
- PMAY beneficiaries must not own a pucca house anywhere in India — a core eligibility condition for both urban and rural variants. [S2]
8. Mains Relevance
GS-II: Social Justice — Welfare Schemes for Vulnerable Sections; Role of the Judiciary; Centre-State Relations. GS-III: Infrastructure — Urban Housing; Land Acquisition and Rehabilitation.
Syllabus headings: - Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors and issues arising out of their design and implementation (GS-II) - Issues relating to poverty and hunger / Urban housing (GS-III) - Structure, organisation and functioning of the Judiciary (GS-II)
Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "The Supreme Court's direction in the Haldwani eviction case reflects an evolving jurisprudence that balances rule of law with social equity. Critically examine." 2. "PMAY as a rehabilitation mechanism for encroachers on public land — evaluate its feasibility, legal implications, and governance challenges." 3. "Discuss the administrative and constitutional complexities in the eviction and rehabilitation of long-term encroachers on Railway land in India, with reference to recent judicial directions."
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| PMAY-Urban & PMAY-Gramin (full scheme details) | Direct subject of SC's rehabilitation suggestion; all parameters examinable |
| Right to Shelter (Article 21 jurisprudence) | Constitutional foundation for eviction challenges; SC has held shelter = life |
| Land Acquisition, Rehabilitation & Resettlement Act, 2013 (LARR) | The statutory framework for displacement compensation — compare with PMAY-based in-kind rehab |
| Adverse Possession & Public Land encroachment laws | SC's ruling clarifies limits of adverse possession against State; Railways Act provisions |
| Legal Services Authorities Act, 1987 & SLSA | SC directed SLSA to run camps — understand its mandate and composition |
| Smart Cities Mission & Urban Housing Policy | Contextualises PMAY within broader urban development framework |
| Slum Rehabilitation in India (JNNURM → PMAY trajectory) | Historical evolution of urban shelter policy for informal settlers |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Ministry confusion: PMAY-Urban → MoHUA; PMAY-Gramin → Ministry of Rural Development. Aspirants often conflate both under a single ministry.
- PMAY-U 2.0 vs. original PMAY-U: The original PMAY-U (2015) had a 2022 completion target; PMAY-U 2.0 is the successor scheme (2024 onwards) with a fresh 1 crore target — do not conflate timelines or targets.
- "Right vs. Concession" confusion: The SC explicitly said rehabilitation is a concession, not a right — aspirants must not cite Haldwani to argue encroachers have a right to PMAY benefits.
- Adverse Possession misapplication: Adverse possession (12-year rule under Limitation Act) does not apply to government/public land — the Haldwani case reinforces this; aspirants confuse private land rules with public land.
- SLSA vs. NALSA: The State Legal Services Authority (SLSA) operates under the National Legal Services Authority (NALSA) — both are constituted under Legal Services Authorities Act, 1987. The SC directed the State-level (SLSA), not the national body.
11. Sources
- [S1] "SC suggests PMAY benefits for Haldwani occupants" — The Hindu, 25 February 2026, Page 4 (Article content provided as primary source) — (Tier 4)
- [S2] "Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana-Urban 2.0" — PIB Press Note — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressNoteDetails.aspx?NoteId=152011&ModuleId=3®=3&lang=1 — (Tier 1)
- [S3] "Cabinet approves Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana-Urban 2.0 Scheme" — PIB — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2043924 — (Tier 1)
- [S4] "Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana – Rural (PMAY-G)" — PIB, November 2024 — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2074713 — (Tier 1)
- [S5] "Automatic exclusion criteria for PMAY-Gramin beneficiaries" — PIB — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleaseIframePage.aspx?PRID=2080091 — (Tier 1)
- [S6] "2.35 Lakh houses approved under PMAY-Urban 2.0 during 3rd CSMC meeting" — PIB — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2137416 — (Tier 1)