• Demand for better civic infra unites two Salt Lakes ahead of Apr 29 polls
    Times of India | 25 April 2026
  • Kolkata: Bidhannagar is one of Kolkata's most socially layered assembly constituencies, where close to 2 lakh voters are spread across the planned affluence of Salt Lake and the dense settlements of Duttabad, Nayapatti and Mahisbathan. The contrast is sharp in terms of housing, income and urban form, yet the political mood of the constituency is shaped by a striking overlap in everyday civic anxieties. Road maintenance, waste disposal, drainage and street lighting remain common concerns across this mixed landscape.

    Salt Lake was envisioned in the 1960s as a model township with a grid-based layout, parks and major administrative centres such as Bikash Bhavan and Karunamoyee. In contrast, adjoining pockets like Duttabad and Mahisbathan expanded alongside the township as working-class settlements that supplied the labour sustaining the area's domestic and service economy. Over time, these neighbourhoods were brought under the Bidhannagar Municipal Corporation as separate wards, raising expectations that civic amenities in the added areas would gradually match those available in the core township.

    That expectation now defines much of the constituency's political conversation. In Salt Lake, residents complain of deteriorating roads, inadequate upkeep, traffic stress in some stretches and the disorder created by overhead cables. In the added areas and parts linked to South Dum Dum within the constituency, waterlogging, drainage failures and waste management are recurring complaints. The divide in living standards remains visible, but the demand from both ends is essentially similar: reliable municipal services and better maintenance of urban infrastructure.

    Citizen groups in Salt Lake have repeatedly flagged these issues. Ritesh Basak, secretary of the Association of Bidhannagar Citizens, said voters continue to face problems ranging from poor roads to inadequate drainage and cable clutter. Shayan Mitra Mustafi, secretary of Citizens' Forum, Salt Lake, pointed to worsening congestion and hazardous road conditions, while also highlighting illegal dumping of garbage and neglect of canal-side public spaces.

    Electorally, Bidhannagar remains a high-profile contest. In 2021, Trinamool's Sujit Bose defeated BJP candidate Sabyasachi Dutta in a closely watched battle. This time, Bose faces two prominent challengers. The BJP has fielded clinical oncologist Sharadwat Mukherjee, while the CPM has nominated advocate Soumyajit Raha. Bose enters the contest with the advantage of long incumbency, organisational reach and familiarity among voters. "From hospitals to safety and security of the citizens, development is the key word for us. The second Bailey bridge has been set up, the Debi Ghat waterbody at Dakshindari has been renovated and a scheme to boost filtered water supply is on," said Bose.

    The BJP, however, is trying to turn the election into a referendum on what it describes as uneven and cosmetic development. "My opponent boasts about development but except for a clock tower and a statue of Messi, what development has taken place till now? The added areas have been neglected for the last 15 years," Mukherjee said. The CPM is attempting to widen the debate beyond civic infrastructure. Raha has focused on closed schools, unemployment, healthcare gaps and governance issues while promising cleaner administration.
  • Link to this news (Times of India)