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Seat watch: R-South and R-Central wards | Encroachments, dug-up roads traffic snarls plague 2 wards

The wards cover 2 densely populated western suburbs Kandivali and Borivali

Vehicles ply on Western Express Highway, at Kandivli east in MumbaiVehicles ply on Western Express Highway, at Kandivli east in Mumbai. (Express photo by Sankhadeep Banerjee)

With the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) heading to polls after an over three-year delay, the residents of R-South and R-Central wards in Mumbai are hopeful of finally having elected public representatives to raise questions with, instead of having to approach respective ward offices with their issues. However, whether their long-standing problems will actually be resolved remains uncertain, as many complain that they have been grappling with the same civic issues for over a decade now.

The two wards, which cover two densely populated western suburbs of the city–Kandivali and Borivali–are largely residential and blessed with green spaces, including the Sanjay Gandhi National Park. But residents continue to face routine civic issues such as hawkers’ menace, encroachment on public spaces, unfinished infrastructure works such as half-concretised or dug-up roads, and chronic traffic congestion.

“Roads connecting Lokhandwala to the highway have become bottlenecks due to hawkers and other public space encroachments. Adding to this is the autorickshaw menace. It is a daily struggle to reach the metro station or Kandivali railway station,” said Santy Shetty, founder of citizens’ group We All Connect, which is active in the Kandivali Lokhandwala Township.

“A new DP road that was meant to solve this issue remains incomplete. The 70 per cent completed stretch is now being used for illegal parking of heavy vehicles, leading to security concerns,” Shetty added.

The group has launched a voters’ awareness campaign in Lokhandwala Township, listing these civic issues and urging residents to vote for those most likely to resolve them.

Another citizens’ group from Thakur Village in Kandivali, Soch Sayani, has prepared a detailed 11-category manifesto for Ward 25 under R-South. The manifesto covers issues ranging from regulated hawking, traffic management, safety and infrastructure to climate concerns, community well-being and animal welfare.

Group founder Harsha Udupi said, “We have two Metro stations nearby and a railway station. But the last-mile connectivity is a real struggle. Despite having multiple gardens, reaching them is difficult due to encroachment on footpaths, making it difficult for pedestrians, especially senior citizens.”

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Highlighting environmental concerns, environmentalist Milly Shetty, a citizen activist from Charkop under R-Central ward, spoke about garbage dumping on mangroves in the locality. “There is a wall between 90 Feet Road and the mangroves. Often, I see garbage being dumped behind the wall, sometimes even by BMC cleaners, without realising the damage it is causing. Thanks to mangroves, we have not suffered flooding or waterlogging yet, but you never know about the future,” Milly complained.

Raising concerns about transport planning, Milly said, “The Versova-Dahisar coastal road is being constructed through Charkop. This will certainly benefit those travelling by car to South Bombay for work. But what about middle-class residents struggling to reach Kandivali railway station or Metro station, due to reduced BEST buses and the autorickshaw menace?”

Rampant redevelopment projects of residential buildings have resulted in excessive dust and pollution, which is a major concern in the R-Central ward. A citizen activist from Chikuwadi, Suresh Lad, said, “This, coupled with incomplete civic works, has worsened the living conditions.”

Shankar Jamsandekar, a citizen activist from Charkop, highlighted how multiple unfinished civic works are left unattended. “There is no platform where people can raise issues,” he said.

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According to many residents, corporators have been the missing link for over three years now and with civic elections, that gap may finally be filled. But not everyone is convinced. Arun Kejariwal, a resident of Mahavir Nagar, which falls under R-South as well as R-Central wards, questioned the effectiveness of corporators. “When have corporators actually resolved issues? We have been facing the same civic issues for over a decade now. And with the increased population, those issues have only multiplied. Now there is all this buzz due to elections…but what about concrete actions afterwards?” he questioned.

Kejariwal, who was part of the BMC’s Advanced Locality Management (ALM) initiative before the COVID-19 pandemic, said that the absence of such citizen engagement platforms had widened the communication gap between residents and the civic body.

Dominated by BJP

Records from the last BMC elections indicate that the political landscape in these two wards is largely dominated by Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), which won 17 out of 23 corporator seats in these two wards combined. While the Shiv Sena had secured five, one went to the Congress. But this was when the Shiv Sena was still undivided and in alliance with the BJP.

With the changed political equations in the state, Marathi votes are likely to be divided between the two Sena factions and the BJP. This could work in BJP’s advantage, given the sizable Gujarati and North Indian population in these two wards.

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Constituency Key Areas Last sitting corporator Male voters Female voters Other voters Total Voters
9 Govind Nagar Shweta Korgaonkar (Congress) 24319 23972 1 48292
10 Daulat Nagar, Nancy Colony Jitendra Patel (BJP) 26892 26318 0 53210
11 Bansi Nagar, Tata Power House Riddhi Khurdange (Shiv Sena) 23539 22378 46 45963
12 Datta Pada Geeta Singhan (Shiv Sena) 21050 19073 0 40123
13 Rajendra Nagar, Khatav Estate Vidyarthi Sing (BJP) 21794 19322 0 41116
14 Kora Kendra Aasawari Patil (BJP) 23059 21746 1 44806
15 Eksar Yogi Nagar Pravin Shah (BJP) 30514 30847 0 61361
16 Chikuwadi Anjali Khedkar (BJP) 26638 24835 1 51474
17 Charkop Bina Doshi (BJP) 25534 25172 1 50707
18 MHB Colony Sandhya Doshi (Shiv Sena) 23543 23049 0 46592
19 Charkop, Kandivali West Shubhda Gudhekar (BJP) 27429 24283 0 51712
20 Dahanukar Wadi Dipak Tawade (BJP) 23687 17688 1 41376
21 Aarya Chanakya Nagar Pratibha Girkar (BJP) 29478 26707 8 56193
22 Poisar Village Priyanka More (BJP) 22567 21649 0 44216
23 Poisar, Rajaram Nagar Shivkumar Zha (BJP) 27819 18044 0 45863
24 Samata Nagar Sunita Yadav (BJP) 21827 19223 0 41050
25 Damupada Madhuri Bhoir (Shiv Sena UBT) 19171 17778 0 36949
26 Vadarpada Colony, Gautam Nagar Pritam Pandagale (BJP) 21842 15940 0 37782
27 Devji Bhimji Colony, Paras Nagar Surekha Patil (BJP) 18122 16679 0 34801
28 Irani Wadi Eknath Hundare (Shiv Sena) 20341 14973 1 35315
29 Mahavir Nagar Sagar Thakur (BJP) 25476 21396 2 46874
30 Kandivali East Leena Daherkar (BJP) 24598 24238 1 48837
31 Kandivali West Kamlesh Yadav (BJP) 28327 17692 6 46025

 

Pallavi Smart is a Principal Correspondent with The Indian Express, Mumbai Bureau. Her reporting is singularly focused on the education sector, demonstrating exceptional Expertise and Authority across the entire spectrum of learning, from foundational schooling to advanced higher education. She is a highly Trustworthy source for policy, institutional developments, and systemic issues affecting students, teachers, and parents in Maharashtra. Expertise Senior Role: As a Principal Correspondent at The Indian Express, her designation reflects her seniority, specialized knowledge, and the editorial rigor applied to her reporting. Core Authority & Specialization: Pallavi Smart is the definitive voice for Education news in the region. Her coverage scope is comprehensive: Policy and Regulatory Changes: Reports on major shifts in educational policy, including the restructuring of entrance exams (e.g., MHT-CET adopting the JEE Main model), the draft regulatory framework for coaching classes, and revised teacher recruitment processes. Higher Education Institutions (HEIs): Provides in-depth reporting on prestigious institutes like IIT Bombay and TISS (Tata Institute of Social Sciences), covering institutional initiatives, administrative debates (e.g., renaming IIT Bombay), and student welfare programs (e.g., mandatory mental health courses). Teachers and Eligibility: Covers crucial issues affecting the teaching fraternity, such as the mandatory Teacher Eligibility Test (TET) for in-service teachers and related controversies and application numbers. Student Welfare & Rights: Focuses on issues concerning students, including the rollout of government scholarships, the financial strain on schools due to midday meal reimbursement delays, and instances of child rights violations (e.g., the Powai studio hostage crisis). Admissions and Vacancy: Tracks the outcome of centralized admission processes (e.g., MBBS, BPharm) and analyzes vacancy concerns, providing essential data-driven insights for parents and students. Credentials & Trustworthiness Dedicated Beat: Her consistent focus on the "KG to PG" education beat allows her to develop unparalleled subject matter knowledge, ensuring her reports are accurate, detailed, and contextualized. Proactive Reporting: Her articles frequently break news on policy and institutional planning, providing the public with timely, essential information about a sector that directly impacts millions of families. She tweets @Pallavi_Smart ... Read More

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