Will pay half of funds needed to run Delhi Metro if Centre

Press Trust of India  |  New Delhi 

Amid a face-off with the Centre over a proposed metro fare hike, Chief Minister Kejriwal today offered to take over the DMRC to make it more efficient and said his was ready to provide half the funds needed to meet the gap in its finances for three months.

In a letter to Union Housing and Urban Affairs Minister Singh Puri, Kejriwal said the Centre bore the entire loss of Metro and there should be no difficulty if it provided half the funds in the case of


Puri had on Friday told the it would need to pay Rs 3,000 crore annually for five years if it wanted to stop the metro fare hike.

Kejriwal said Puri's contention that the Metro Rail Corporation was bound to follow the Fare Fixation Committee's recommendations seemed "untenable".

Citing Section 86 of the DMRC Act, he said it was the Centre which had set up the fourth FFC after a lapse of seven years. Therefore, the Union minister's contention that the central was "powerless" in respect of fare fixation was "flawed".

The FFC-recommended fare hike, a second in seven months, will come into effect on October 10.

He said the city was confident it would be able to fund the DMRC by improving its efficiency rather than effecting steep fare hikes.

"As for your suggestion regarding a grant to the DMRC for meeting the gap in their finances, my is willing to bear half the grant if only a matching grant is provided by the central

"As you know, the central and the are 50-50 owners of the DMRC and its equity etc. have been shared in this proportion all along," Kejriwal said in the letter.

"Let an assessment be made of the financial gap likely to be created on account of the postponement of the second fare hike and we will be able to bear half of it," he said.

Sources in the said the CM offered to provide on a short-term basis half the funds the DMRC needed to meet the gap in its finances so that another FFC could be set up to recommend fresh fares.

Besides cooperative federalism, the point remains that the Centre and are equal partners in the DMRC, Kejriwal said.

"From the recent developments, it is becoming evident that the relationship is not one of equal partners since what the proposes is often summarily disposed by the Cental

"If the Central agrees, would be willing to take over the DMRC," he said.

Fares will go up by a maximum of Rs 10 after the latest hike comes into effect.

The existing fare structure is: up to 2 kms -- Rs 10, 2-5 kms -- Rs 15, 5-12 kms -- Rs 20, 12-21 kms -- Rs 30, 21-32 kms -- Rs 40 and for journeys beyond 32 kms -- Rs 50.

From October 10, for a distance of up to two kilometres, the fare will remain Rs 10, but for a distance between two and five kilometres, it will go up from Rs 15 to Rs 20.

For the subsequent slabs, it will go up by Rs 10 each, which means the maximum fare will be Rs 60.

Metro managing director Mangu Singh also met the chief minister at his residence today. It was immediately not known as to what transpired at the meeting.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sun, October 08 2017. 21:57 IST