Massive Relief Drive Across Mumbai Slums as SRA Grievance Camps Resolve Hundreds of Long-Pending Cases
Mumbai’s Slum Rehabilitation Authority has launched large-scale grievance resolution camps across Borivali, Goregaon, Bandra, and Sion, resolving hundreds of cases on the spot. Led by CEO Dr. Mahendra Kalyankar and supported by senior leaders including Piyush Goyal, the initiative brings administration directly to citizens, addressing rent disputes, eligibility issues, rehabilitation concerns, and housing allocation problems.
The ongoing campaigns are being seen as a coordinated effort to bring administrative services directly to citizens’ doorsteps, significantly improving accessibility and response time for grievance redressal.
In Borivali, the first-ever SRA public grievance camp was held at Atal Smriti Udyan, marking a significant milestone in on-ground citizen engagement. The camp addressed multiple categories of issues, including biometric-related complications, pending rent disputes, eligibility conflicts, flat allocation concerns, and matters linked to rehabilitation schemes. A large number of cases were resolved during the event. The programme was attended by Union Minister Piyush Goyal, legislator Sanjay Upadhyay, and senior officials of the SRA, highlighting strong institutional backing for the initiative. The drive has been associated with the broader vision of a “Slum Free Mumbai by SRA”.
In Goregaon East’s Aarey Colony, another dedicated grievance camp witnessed the participation of more than 500 residents. Citizens from over 60 housing societies across Andheri, Jogeshwari, Versova, Goregaon, and Dindoshi regions presented their grievances. Many issues were addressed on the spot, with immediate administrative action initiated in several cases. The camp saw the involvement of Member of Parliament Ravindra Waikar, who facilitated coordination between residents and officials.
At Bandra’s Rang Sharda Auditorium, a large-scale public grievance camp benefited over 800 slum residents. Officials engaged directly with citizens on issues related to eligibility verification, rehabilitation processes, documentation challenges, rent concerns, and redevelopment schemes. The event was supported by Cultural Affairs Minister Ashish Shelar, reinforcing the administrative push for streamlined grievance resolution.
In Sion, a highly attended camp at Guru Nanak College Hall saw more than 1,000 residents arriving to present their concerns. SRA officials actively heard complaints and resolved several cases during the session. The event was attended by legislator R. Tamil Selvan, further underscoring political and administrative participation in the outreach initiative.
Dr. Mahendra Kalyankar, IAS, Chief Executive Officer of the SRA, has been widely discussed for his operational approach, which emphasizes field-level grievance camps and direct administrative engagement with citizens. By deploying officials into localities and ensuring immediate resolution of complaints, the SRA’s functioning is increasingly being viewed as a transformed governance model. Slum residents have expressed that, for the first time, the administration is directly reaching their neighborhoods to hear grievances, significantly strengthening public trust in the system.
The series of camps across Borivali, Goregaon, Bandra, and Sion collectively signals a reinforced administrative push toward systematic rehabilitation and faster grievance redressal under the SRA framewor

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