My City My Budget: Janaagraha to submit data to BBMP Mayor

While 1,028 citizens participated in debates to discuss inputs to the budget, over 8000 school kids provided inputs on a few ‘quality of life’ issues that affect them.

Janaagraha’s Participatory Budgeting campaign in Bengaluru, called MyCityMyBudget, was launched on November 23, 2015. Over more than two months of hectic online and on-ground activity, the campaign reached out to various sections of the city’s citizenry to facilitate their identification of inputs to the forthcoming BBMP Budget. Citizens were asked to give inputs pertaining to their respective wards and neighborhoods. The campaign is now poised to move to the next phase of submitting the inputs received to the elected representatives and the relevant agencies.

Sapna Karim, Co-ordinator, Civic Participation, Janaagraha, says: “Our team has complied the inputs and shared a copy of the ward-wise reports of inputs with the Resident Welfare Associations where workshops were conducted. These associations can start discussions with their respective Corporators with a structured data-set of issues pertaining to their wards. It is heartening to note that many Associations have already begun the process. Our next step will be to invite Association representatives to submit these inputs to the Mayor and the BBMP heads. We plan to conduct an event for that in the next ten days.”

Here are some highlights of the first phase of the campaign:

Ø  6,037 inputs were received from across Bengaluru. These came in through on-ground workshops and Janaagraha’s online platform ichangemycity.com.

Ø  Over 60% of these inputs pertain to the BBMP. The next big chunk pertains to BWSSB.

Ø  On-ground workshops were held in 75 wards through Resident Welfare Associations and other citizen groups (e.g. shop owners associations, trade unions and communities like Whitefield Rising). Also, there was a conscious attempt to include inputs from the urban poor in a few wards in the city through the Jana Pragati centres.

On the other hand, the online leg of the campaign (on ichangemycity.com) drew responses from all wards in the city.

Ø 1,028 citizens came together in the various on-ground workshops to debate and discuss inputs to the budget.

Ø  Over 8000 school kids provided inputs on a few ‘quality of life’ issues that affect them.

Once the BBMP budget is released, Janaagraha will analyse the citizen-input data against the budgets announced. At that stage, bulletins and updates will be put out for the benefit of the citizens at large, and specifically, for those from whom budget inputs were received. In the succeeding weeks thereafter, Janaagraha will continue to monitor the inclusion of citizens’ inputs in the budget and keep sending out updates as part of their community engagement plans.

 

Related Articles

Ahead of the budget, tell the BBMP where and how to spend your money

Leave a Reply

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

Similar Story

Bengaluru is building ward-level climate action plans: Here is how

The Climate Action Cell will develop ward action plans for ten wards in five city corporations of Bengaluru. These will be replicated in other wards.

In Varthur, east Bengaluru, residents watch in dismay as leachate from garbage trucks seeps into the Varthur Lake. “We need a local composting or bio-methanisation plant right here in the ward,” insists Jagdish Reddy, a resident. He points out that irregular waste collection and burning of leaf litter are not just polluting water bodies but also affecting air quality. Across the city, the problems are varied, but the frustration is the same. In HSR Layout’s 5th sector, open drains reek, and roads flood with the slightest rain, says Jyothi G Prabhu. Meanwhile, Gunjur resident Chetan Gopal points out that the…

Similar Story

Confusing forms, tight deadlines: Inside the flawed SIR process

Enumeration deadline extended to Dec 11th; as Chennai voters and BLOs race to wrap up, we give you a lowdown on the process.

In Chennai’s Perumbakkam resettlement site, residents working as domestic workers leave home at 9 am and return only after 6 pm. For them, the Election Commission of India’s (ECI) Special Intensive Revision (SIR) seems almost impossible to navigate. A community worker from the area observes that in earlier voter roll verifications, households received a simple part-number booklet. Now, Booth Level Officers (BLOs) set up camps instead of going door-to-door, asking residents to collect the forms themselves. The new form asks for additional details such as parents’ voter IDs, which many residents do not know, she adds. With low literacy levels,…