Registration of builders, adherence to approved plans and refund of money in cases of default will become mandatory under a new law that the government plans to bring in to usher in "accountability and transparency" in land selling and housing transactions.
A Real Estate Regulatory Authority will also be established under the Real Estate (Regulation and Development) Bill, 2011, whose
draft was made public on Friday by Union Minister for Housing and Urban Poverty Alleviation Kumari Selja in the national capital.
The long-pending legislation that seeks to protect home-buyers from fly-by-night developers is likely to be sent to the Union Cabinet for its approval during the Winter Session of Parliament.
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Once the law comes into force, no promoter or builder will be able to develop any immovable property without registering the real estate project and obtaining a registration certificate from the proposed authority.
"The Government of India has been planning such a legislation for a very long time and real estate sector and others have approached me on a number of occasions on such kind of a law. The aim is to intervene and ensure transparency and accountability on part of the promoter to the consumer," Selja told a press conference.
Buying a house? Here's how to stay clear of land troubles The major aim of such a legislation, the Minister said, was to regulate the activities of the real estate sector and usher in an era of "accountability and transparency" in land selling and housing transactions.
The Minister has also written a letter to chief ministers enclosing a copy of the draft bill seeking their views on the legislation.
Asked about the possibility of criticism from the sector of the proposed Bill, Selja said: "I do not wish to convey that I have a rigid stand on the issue. We will talk to everyone whoever wishes to and strike a balance."