Mumbai, 23rd December 2025: In a significant step towards coordinated and reform-oriented land administration, the District Collector, Mumbai City, Aanchal Goyal, and the District Collector, Mumbai Suburban, Saurabh Katiyar, held a collective meeting with a Joint Task Force comprising representatives of CREDAI-MCHI, NAREDCO, BDA and PEATA, along with senior officials from both Collectorates.
District Collector, Mumbai Suburban, Saurabh Katiyar, emphasized that bringing both City and Suburban Collectorates together in a single forum enables coordinated governance and uniform decision-making. He confirmed that suggestions such as unified physical surveys, streamlined amalgamation and subdivision procedures, and improved transparency in land records would be examined through a structured institutional mechanism to ensure practical and time-bound implementation.
Mr. Rushi Mehta, Secretary CREDAI MCHI and Mr. Manan Shah led the wide ranging discussions which included the applicability of royalty on excavated soil, especially the need to exclude royalty where material is not transported outside the project site, as well as challenges relating to short validity periods, inaccuracies in excavation quantity calculations, and approval delays. Both Collectors assured that simplified and time-bound SOPs for royalty permissions would be introduced to comprehensively address these concerns.
Commenting on behalf of the industry, Mr. Sukhraj Nahar, President, CREDAI - MCHI said, “The issues raised today—royalty applicability, procedural delays, duplication of surveys, and approval timelines—are genuine and long-pending. The joint commitment of both Collectorates to SOP-driven processes, unified surveys, and a steering committee reflects a shared intent to deliver practical, time-bound reforms that improve ease of doing business while strengthening transparency and governance.”
Supporting the initiative, Mr. Vikram Mehta, President, BDA, and Mr. Sandip Isore, President, PEATA, noted that unified procedures and streamlined approvals would meaningfully reduce procedural redundancies and operational delays.
The Joint Task Force reaffirmed its commitment to continued engagement with the administration to ensure that these discussions translate into tangible, on-ground reforms across Mumbai’s real estate sector and towards that end a steering committee would be formed which would include officers from the office of the Collector and various ancillary departments to deliberate and streamline procedural bottlenecks and suggest policy changes to be implemented at either the Collector level or recommended to Government for further necessary action.

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