CM had asked Mhada chief to explain SRA policy changes
Prafulla Marpakwar and Nauzer Bharucha, The Times of India
January 26, 2008

As CEO of the Slum Rehabilitation Authority (SRA), for which he held additional charge, T Chandrashekhar had withdrawn permissions granted to builders for redeveloping 120 slum pockets without seeking the permission of the government, and in particular the chief minister.

Significantly, during the winter session of the state legislature in Nagpur last November, Vilasrao Deshmukh had told the assembly that no decision had been taken to revoke these permissions. “When some senior officials and politicians brought Chandrashekhar’s unilateral decision to the CM’s notice, he (Deshmukh) had to face an embarrassing situation,’’ an official said.

Before leaving for his week-long foreign tour on January 22, Deshmukh had not only relieved the bureaucrat from his charge of the SRA, but had also asked him for an explanation for making policy changes in SRA schemes without the government’s permission.

According to government sources, Chandrashekhar had merged two independent slum projects in the Bandra Kurla Complex which had allegedly benefited a private developer. The state government had sought legal opinion on this and found that the move was illegal.

Chandrashekhar has long been considered the blue-eyed bureaucrat of successive chief ministers because of his go-getting ways in implementing infrastructure projects in Thane, Nagpur and Mumbai. He first came into thelimelight during his stint as the Ratnagiri collector in 1995 when he ordered the demolition of an illegal hotel belonging to a senior Congress politician.

As Thane municipal commissioner, he had to move around with armed security following threats to his life from the local mafia. He had ordered the demolition of 20,000 unauthorised constructions and encroachments coming in the way of public projects. In this, he was strongly backed by Shiv Sena supremo Bal Thackeray.