Complaints Surge 43% After Nmc’s Elected Body Returns

Complaints Surge 43% After Nmc’s Elected Body Returns
Nagpur: The return of elected representatives to the Nagpur Municipal Corporation (NMC) after four years of administrator rule appears to have done little to ease citizens' civic woes. Official data shows public complaints have risen sharply since the General Body was restored in the second fortnight of January.Between Jan 1 and May 31, 2025, when the civic body functioned under an administrator, citizens lodged 16,362 complaints through NMC's grievance redressal system. During a comparable period from Jan 1 to June 4, 2026, after elected corporators resumed office, complaints surged to 23,444, an increase of 7,082 grievances, or more than 43%.Sanitation remained the biggest source of complaints. The health sanitation department received 7,018 complaints in 2025, which jumped to 11,851 in 2026 — an increase of nearly 69%. The rise highlights persistent problems in garbage collection, roadside cleanliness, overflowing bins, and waste disposal despite repeated claims of improved sanitation management.The increase was visible across other departments as well.
Electrical complaints rose from 1,472 in 2025 to 2,448 in 2026. Water works complaints increased from 1,301 to 1,684, while public works grievances climbed from 1,881 to 2,319. Encroachment-related complaints also rose from 943 to 1,074.The figures raise uncomfortable questions about civic service delivery after the return of elected governance. While residents expected greater accountability with corporators back in office, the volume of complaints indicates that routine civic issues remain unresolved across departments.The sanitation department also emerged as one of the poorest performers in timely grievance redressal. Of the 11,851 complaints received in 2026, only 6,306 were resolved within the stipulated service deadline, while 2,428 were closed after breaching the prescribed service-level agreement (SLA). Hundreds remained under process or were reopened by dissatisfied citizens.Another concerning trend was the growing number of transferred complaints. Nearly 3,000 grievances were shifted between departments in 2026, often forcing residents to navigate bureaucratic delays before their issues reached the appropriate authority.With monsoon-related challenges looming and sanitation, roads, water supply, and electrical issues continuing to dominate grievance charts, the data paints a troubling picture of a city still struggling to deliver basic municipal services.NMC Grievance ComparisonDepts--Jan-May 2025----Jan 1- June 4, 2026----IncreaseSanitation---7,018----11,851----+4,833Electrical---1,472----2,448----+976Public Works---1,881----2,319----+438Water Works---1,301----1,684----+383Encroachment---943----1,074----+131Malaria & Filaria---715----1,120----+405Total Complaints---16,362----23,444----+7,082Overall ComplaintsJan-May 2025 (Administrator Rule): 16,362Jan 1- June 4, 2026 (Elected General Body): 23,444Increase: 7,082 complaintsGrowth: 43.3%

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About the AuthorProshun Chakraborty

Proshun Chakraborty is a seasoned journalist with over 25 years of experience in civic and urban affairs reporting. Currently Editor-Civic Affairs at The Times of India, Nagpur, he leads coverage on municipal governance, public infrastructure, traffic management, RTO affairs, and urban policy shifts. Proshun has built a trusted network across citizens, bureaucracy and political landscape. He is highly respected for his depth in civic journalism and unwavering commitment to public interest reporting. His hobbies include reading, listening to music and travelling.

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