NCR labourers went without pay during construction ban'

Step was taken to fight rising pollution; EPCA says will review issue.

Update: 2017-11-25 19:50 GMT
The government, in its petition, has pleaded not to give a benefit of doubt to Govindaswamy since all other evidences are against him. (Photo: File)

New Delhi: The Delhi government has informed the Supreme Court appointed watchdog EPCA that the ban on construction activities during the emergency levels of pollution had left migrant labourers in the lurch as contractors refused to pay them.

The Environment Pollution–Prevention and Control Authority (EPCA) has now decided to review the issue, which forced many labourers to leave, and hammer out a solution as it concerned the livelihoods of thousands who flock to the city in search of work.

EPCA chairman Bhure Lal and member Sunita Narain have stressed that contractors would have to pay the labourers during the period of the ban.

But officials from Delhi and the National Capital Region (NCR) states, in a recent meeting with the EPCA, pointed out that in the absence of any legislation that provides the workers the safety of paid leave, it becomes next to impossible to enforce it.

Earlier in November, when pollution had climbed to emergency levels, turning the air quality extremely hazardous, the lieutenant-governor Anil Baijal had approved the EPCA’s recommendation to ban civil construction activities, a measure listed under the Graded Response Action Plan (GRAP).

Meanwhile, the EPCA has once again urged the India Meteorological Department (IMD) to devise a mechanism to provide pollution forecast for at least a week, saying the current two-day prediction makes it difficult to implement measures such as the odd-even scheme or ban on entry of trucks. The EPCA pointed towards cities such as Beijing where pollution forecast of at least 15 days is available. “The MeT cannot leave us in a situation like this,” Ms Narain said.

In a recent report to the Supreme Court, the EPCA had flagged the same issue, saying that had it been aware of certain meteorological factors, it could have been better prepared to deal with the situation, which also prompted authorities to close schools.

“This year, the last information, the EPCA had on the prevailing weather conditions was on November 6, 2017. This did not provide any warning of the kind of anti-cyclonic weather disturbance that was happening in the upper circulatory system and the impending problems it would bring.

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