Avinash Azad
Patnitop, Jammu and Kashmir’s crown jewel of tourism, stands at a crossroads as the government touts ambitious development plans while locals chafe under unyielding regulations and bureaucratic delays.
In a revealing exchange with MLA Balwant Singh Mankotia, the Patnitop Development Authority (PDA) laid out a vision of progress—revised master plans, ropeways, and yoga retreats—yet doubled down on strict building rules, offering no relief for minor violators and leaving the region’s full potential dangling. As the government balances ethical stewardship with economic promise, the question looms: will Patnitop’s future honor its people as much as its tourists?
PDA, birthed in 1992 to transform the iconic hill station into a tourism beacon, is under scrutiny as MLA Balwant Singh Mankotia probes its progress—and its pitfalls. Established under SRO 69 on March 26, 1992, via the J&K Development Act 1970, the PDA oversees 14 villages in its ambit, a detail confirmed in the government’s response to Mankotia’s first query. But beneath the surface of this tourist haven lies a tangle of ambition, regulation, and frustration.
Mankotia pressed on, asking if the PDA’s master plan—notified under SRO 117 on April 25, 2000, delineating green, agricultural, commercial, and no-construction zones—would see a refresh. The government affirmed it’s a top priority, with a revised plan for all 14 villages under active consideration.
Yet, when it came to easing the chokehold of building permissions, governed by the Building Permission Committee under the Deputy Commissioner (Udhampur/Ramban) and tied to the 2000 master plan, the response was clinical: permissions align strictly with designated land use. No shortcuts, no leniency.
The MLA’s plea for a one-time relaxation to regularize minor building violations—a lifeline for residents caught in the regulatory web—met a brick wall. “Presently, there is no such proposal,” the government stated, prioritizing compliance over compassion in a region where livelihoods often hinge on small-scale construction. Ethically, it’s a stance that safeguards planned development but risks alienating the very communities it serves.
On the Mantalai International Yoga Centre, part of the Rs. 92 crore “Integrated Development of Mantalai-Sudhmahadev-Patnitop” project under the Swadesh Darshan Scheme, the government reported completion at Rs. 89.59 crore. Handed over to the PDA on March 12, 2024, the site now awaits outsourcing, with an RFP document in the works under the Industries & Commerce Secretary. Delays, they imply, stem from this transition—not neglect—though the timeline for full functionality remains hazy.
Mankotia’s final push—on promoting Patnitop alongside Binisang, Sudhmahadev, Gouri Kund, Mantalai, Latti, Ladha, Nathatop, Sanasar, and more—drew a laundry list of initiatives: road upgrades, water ATMs, viewing points, bamboo huts, a 9-hole golf course, and the crowd-pulling Patnitop Ropeway. Trekking routes and the PMDP-backed integration of Mantalai and Sudhmahadev signal a tourism boom in waiting. Yet, the sheen of progress contrasts starkly with the rigid rules stifling local flexibility.