BMC budget 2022 highlights: Coastal road, Shiv Yoga centres, digital classrooms and more

The BMC unveiled its civic budget for 2022-23, asserting its focus on health, infrastructure and education. Here are some key takeaways.

On February 3rd, India’s richest civic body, the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC)’s commissioner Iqbal Singh Chahal unveiled the civic budget for the financial year 2022-23. The budget for this year is a whopping Rs 45,949.21 crore, a 17.70% jump from the previous year (Rs 39,038.83 crore).

The focus of this year’s allocation is on health, infrastructure and education. We’ve highlighted key points from the budget announcement.

Big developmental projects

  • Rs 3,200 crore for the Mumbai Coastal Road project
  • Rs 1,300 crore for the Goregaon Mukund Rail project
  • New security systems like Boom Barrier and Hand Metal Detectors to be installed at various places
  • Rs 1,340 crore for Sewerage Treatment Project (STP)

Read more: The case against Mumbai’s Coastal Road project


Property Tax

  • 100% relief from property tax for 6,14,000 residential property owners of 500 sq ft or less carpet area.
  • Due to COVID-19 conditions, property tax has not been increased.
  • Income from property tax is estimated at Rs.7,000.00 crore.
buildings among green cover in mumbai
Relief from property taxes owing to COVID-19 conditions was announced during the budget | Photo: Wikimedia Commons, Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 Generic (CC BY-SA 2.0

Health

Expenditure for health services in the city has been increased to Rs 6,933 crore, which is 15.09% of the total budget. Among new projects is the development of 200 Shiv Yoga centres, where physical and mental health for the old, co-morbid, and young, will be prioritised. Rs 30 crore has been allocated the project. Online training will be made available from all centres.

“The major focus is on primary health care facilities and overall health care infrastructure. This time, we have taken up major projects to upgrade and set up diagnostic centres, 200 yoga centres-Shiv Yog centres. We want to remove the burden of secondary and tertiary civic health centres by upgrading primary health centres,” said BMC Additional Commissioner of public health Suresh Kakani.

With the support of the Tata Cancer Hospital, the BMC will set up a Proton Therapy Facility. Rs 400 crore has been allocated for the development of 200 Hinduhridaysamrat Balasaheb Thackeray Health Centres, where consultation from doctors from KEM, Sion, Nair and Cooper Hospitals will be made available via telemedicine.

Rs 250 crore and Rs 165 crore has been allocated for the redevelopment of Bhagwati Hospital and the Sion Hospital premises, respectively.

Rs 303 crore has been allocated for the standardisation and modernisation of dispensaries.

Education

“I am glad to announce that the work of creating 1300 digital classrooms in the various municipal schools has been taken up in the financial year 2021-22 and will be completed in the first quarter of the financial year i.e. 2022-23,” said Iqbal Singh Chahal.

The education budget for FY 2022-23 is Rs 3,370.24 crore. Apart from the digitisation of classrooms, 103 repair projects for schools are in progress. Rs 50 crore has been allocated to ensure the safety of physical schooling this year.

Infrastructure

The highest budget allocation is for infrastructure at Rs.22,646 crore. Money has been allocated to different departments like Bridges and Storm Water Drains.

Rs 400 crore has been allocated for the widening of the Mithi river and other nallah systems. Constructions of pumping stations at Mogra, Mahul and Chunnabhatti have been included in the budget, along with the construction of large flood water holding tanks at three different locations.

Sources: The Free Press Journal, The Quint

Also read:

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Similar Story

Exclusions and evictions: Mumbai Pardhi community’s struggle for shelter and dignity

In Borivali’s Chikuwadi, BMC demolitions left Pardhi families homeless and harassed. They demand housing and basic facilities.

Over a fire of burning newspaper and cardboard, Madhuban Pawar, in her mid-60s, sits on the cold stone floor brewing tea. It is 11 pm, and her husband waits beside her for their only meal of the day: a single glucose biscuit and a glass of tea. In the wake of the December 2, 2025, demolition drive in Mumbai's Borivali, a lone cooking utensil is all the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) left her with. Madhuban, like many from Borivali's Chikuwadi, has inhabited the slums for over 20 years. "I work as a sanitation worker. During monsoons, our job is to…

Similar Story

Voting in Mumbai: Complete guide to BMC elections and making your voice heard

Mumbai citizens will vote on January 15 to elect 227 councillors. Here's all you need to know about the BMC and the voting process.

After nearly four years of delay, Mumbai is finally set to hold its municipal elections on January 15. The last elected council completed its term in 2022, and in the absence of fresh polls, the city’s civic body was placed under an administrator for the first time in forty years. The Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC), established in 1888, is the governing authority responsible for delivering essential civic services — from water supply, sanitation, and solid waste management to public health, infrastructure, roads, and education. With a staggering budget of ₹74,427 crore for 2025–26, it is the wealthiest municipal body in…