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rti-for-railway-station-development [2026/07/04 00:12] (current) – created - external edit 127.0.0.1
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 +{{htmlmetatags>metatag-title=(RTI for Railway Station Redevelopment - RTI Wiki)&metatag-description=(File RTI to the DRM or RLDA to track Amrit Bharat station redevelopment: DPR, contractor, milestones, expenditure. Rs.10 fee, 30-day reply, full escalation ladder.)&metatag-keywords=(railway station RTI, Amrit Bharat Station Scheme, RLDA, DRM, station redevelopment, RTI template)&metatag-robots=(index,follow)&metatag-og:title=(RTI for Railway Station Redevelopment - RTI Wiki)&metatag-og:description=(File RTI to the DRM or RLDA to track Amrit Bharat station redevelopment: DPR, contractor, milestones, expenditure. Rs.10 fee, 30-day reply.)&metatag-og:type=(article)}}
  
 +====== RTI for Railway Station Redevelopment ======
 +
 +Ramesh takes a local train from his town station every morning. For two years he has watched the old platform shed come down, a new roof go up in fits and starts, and a board appear that reads "Amrit Bharat Station". What he has never seen is a finished station. The contractor changes, the boards change, the deadline changes, and nobody can tell him when it will actually end. So he asks the station master. The station master shrugs. He asks the contractor's clerk. The clerk says "talk to the DRM office". The DRM office does not reply.
 +
 +This is the gap a single RTI application closes. Indian Railways is redeveloping more than 1,300 stations right now, and every rupee, every milestone, and every contract detail on those works is a record the public can ask for. This page shows you, step by step, how to get those records from the right office, within the right deadline, and what to do when the reply never comes.
 +
 +<WRAP info>**Direct answer.** File your RTI to the **DRM office** of your zonal railway for Amrit Bharat station works. File to **RLDA** only for the small set of stations handed to the Rail Land Development Authority. Ask for the DPR, contractor name and value, milestones, expenditure, and variation orders. Fee is Rs.10. Reply is due in 30 days.</WRAP>
 +
 +===== Which scheme is your station under? =====
 +
 +Most stations being rebuilt today fall under the **Amrit Bharat Station Scheme (ABSS)**. The Ministry of Railways launched it in December 2022. About **1,309 stations** were picked under it. Foundation stones for 508 stations were laid on 6 August 2023, and Phase-1 works began on 24 September 2023. ABSS is run **zonal-railway-wise** — that is, each zonal railway (Northern, Western, Southern, and so on) looks after the stations in its own area. It replaces the older Adarsh Station Scheme that ran from 2009-10.
 +
 +As of February 2026, **172 stations had been completed** under ABSS and **1,165 were still in progress**. So if your station is mid-work, you are in the majority.
 +
 +A smaller track runs in parallel. About **104 stations have been entrusted to RLDA** (the Rail Land Development Authority), of which **3 are already commissioned** — Rani Kamlapati, Gandhinagar, and Gomtinagar. About **98% of ABSS awards are EPC contracts** (that is, the railway pays the contractor to build, not a private partner running the station), while **15 stations are being explored under PPP** (public-private partnership, where a private company invests and runs part of the station for a share of revenue).
 +
 +Why does this split matter for RTI? Because the **office you file to** depends on which track your station is on.
 +
 +===== Who you file to: the two doors =====
 +
 +**Door 1 — The DRM office (zonal railway).** This is where the vast majority of Amrit Bharat station files live. The CPIO for divisional station works sits inside the DRM's office — usually the **Sr. DCM** (Senior Divisional Commercial Manager) or the **Divisional Engineer**. The First Appellate Authority is normally the **Addl. DRM (Administration)**. This routing has been confirmed in CIC decisions such as *Prasanta Basuray v. Ministry of Railways* (CIC/AD/A/2010/000861) and *Chetan Nisar v. Central Railway* (CIC/CRAIL/A/2019/601769), where the Commission treated the DRM's office as the proper divisional PIO for station and redevelopment records.
 +
 +**Door 2 — RLDA.** If your station is one of the ~104 entrusted to RLDA, the land and redevelopment files are with RLDA, not the DRM. RLDA has its own CPIO at its headquarters. Check the RLDA website (rlda.indianrailways.gov.in) for the current CPIO name and address.
 +
 +A quick note on a name you may still see in old news reports: **IRSDC** (Indian Railway Stations Development Corporation). IRSDC used to run flagship station projects. It was **dissolved by the Railway Board on 18 October 2021**, and its stations were transferred to the zonal railways. IRSDC no longer exists, its old subdomain does not resolve, and **you cannot file an RTI to an office that no longer exists**. If an older article or template tells you to write to IRSDC, ignore that — file to the DRM or RLDA instead.
 +
 +===== The legal backbone =====
 +
 +Three things give you the right to ask:
 +
 +  - **The RTI Act, 2005.** Indian Railways, RLDA, and the zonal railways are all "public authorities" under **Section 2(h)**. That means they must appoint CPIOs and reply to citizens. Even where a station is rebuilt under PPP, the Railway or RLDA stays the **conduit public authority** — the private partner's records flow to you through the railway, so PPP is not an escape route.
 +  - **The Railways Act, 1989, as amended in 2005.** RLDA itself was created by **The Railways (Amendment) Act, 2005 (Act 47 of 2005)**, which inserted **Chapter IIA (Sections 4A to 4I)** into the Railways Act, 1989. It also added a clause to Section 11 letting railways develop land for commercial use, and defined "Authority" and "railway land". There is **no separate "RLDA Act 2005"** — that phrase you may see online is a misframing. RLDA was **operationalised on 1 November 2006**.
 +  - **The RTI Rules, 2012.** These set the Rs.10 fee and the format. They were notified on 31 July 2012 under Section 27 of the RTI Act.
 +
 +On disclosure limits: **Section 8(1)(d)** protects the commercial confidence and trade secrets of **rival bidders** during a tender, and **Section 11** requires the railway to give a bidder notice before releasing that bidder's data. But once a contract is **awarded**, the essentials — the winning bidder, the contract value, and the scope of work — are disclosable under **Section 4(1)(b)** as part of the public authority's own obligations. In other words, you cannot get a competitor's secret bid, but you can get the name, value, and scope of the bid that won. For a deeper walkthrough of that line, see [[pio-tender-contract-rti|RTI for tender and contract records]] and [[tender-details-rti|how to ask for tender details]].
 +
 +===== What to ask for: the question list =====
 +
 +Pick the ones that match your worry. You do not have to ask all of them.
 +
 +  - **DPR and approvals.** The Detailed Project Report is the master document — it has the design, the cost estimate, and the timeline the railway approved. Ask for a copy of the sanctioned DPR and the approval note.
 +  - **Contractor and contract value.** Who won the work, for how much, and on what date. Post-award, this is disclosable.
 +  - **Milestones and current status.** A station project is broken into milestones (foundation, platform, roof, facade, finishing). Ask for the milestone chart and the current physical progress percentage.
 +  - **Expenditure to date.** How much has been paid out against the sanctioned cost. This is where overrun stories live.
 +  - **Variation orders.** When the scope or cost changes mid-work, the railway issues a variation order. Ask for all variation orders and the reasons for each. This is the single most useful ask when a project keeps "changing".
 +
 +If you suspect the timeline is slipping, also ask for the **scheduled completion date** and any **time-extension granted**, with reasons.
 +
 +===== How to file: form, fee, deadline =====
 +
 +**Step 1 — Write the application.** There is no fixed form for Central Government authorities. A plain handwritten or typed letter is enough. Put "Application under Section 6 of the RTI Act, 2005" at the top. Name the station, the scheme (Amrit Bharat or RLDA), and list your questions clearly.
 +
 +**Step 2 — Address it.** To "The Central Public Information Officer, Office of the Divisional Railway Manager, [Division], [Zonal Railway]" for ABSS works. For RLDA stations, address it to the CPIO, Rail Land Development Authority.
 +
 +**Step 3 — Pay the fee.** The fee is **Rs.10** for Central Government public authorities, set by the RTI Rules, 2012. Pay by cash against a receipt at the DRM office counter, by Indian Postal Order, by Demand Draft, or **online through rtionline.gov.in** (the easiest route — no post office trip). **BPL applicants are exempt** from the fee; attach a copy of your BPL certificate.
 +
 +**Step 4 — Keep proof.** Keep the stamped counterfoil, the IPO stub, or the online acknowledgement number. This is your receipt and your evidence later.
 +
 +**Step 5 — Wait 30 days.** Under the RTI Act, the authority must reply **within 30 days** (48 hours where life or liberty is at stake — not the case for station works). If 30 days pass with no reply, or a reply that hides more than it shows, you move to the next step.
 +
 +===== The escalation ladder =====
 +
 +RTI works like a staircase. You go up one step at a time.
 +
 +  - **Step 1 — The CPIO.** The first reply comes from the DRM office CPIO (or RLDA CPIO). This is where most good applications end — a clean, item-by-item reply.
 +  - **Step 2 — First Appeal.** If the reply is wrong, incomplete, or missing, file a **first appeal** to the First Appellate Authority under **Section 19(1)** within **30 days** of the reply (or of the missed deadline). For station works the FAA is usually the Addl. DRM (Admn); for RLDA, the designated FAA at RLDA headquarters. The FAA must decide within 30 days (extendable to 45). For the full mechanics, see [[file-first-appeal-rti-section-19-2026|how to file a first appeal under Section 19]].
 +  - **Step 3 — Second Appeal to the CIC.** If the FAA also fails, file a **second appeal** to the **Central Information Commission** under **Section 19(3)** within **90 days**. The CIC can order disclosure and even impose a penalty of Rs.250 per day on the CPIO, up to Rs.25,000. See [[file-second-appeal-cic-sic-2026|how to file a second appeal to the CIC]].
 +  - **Step 4 — If a tender looks rigged.** If your RTI replies show a tender was awarded in a way that smells wrong, that is when a court steps in. The leading precedent is **Tata Cellular v. Union of India, (1994) 6 SCC 651**, where the Supreme Court laid down the grounds for judicial review of government tenders — a court will interfere only for **mala fides, bias, arbitrariness (Wednesbury unreasonableness), or procedural impropriety**. It is a general tender-review ruling, not a station-specific case, but it is the test courts apply to station contracts too. Take your RTI records to a lawyer or to the High Court under writ jurisdiction. Pair this with [[rti-for-tender-evaluation|RTI for tender evaluation]] to build the paper trail.
 +
 +===== A ready-to-use template =====
 +
 +<code>
 +To: The Central Public Information Officer
 +    Office of the Divisional Railway Manager, [Division], [Zonal Railway]
 +    [For RLDA stations: CPIO, Rail Land Development Authority, New Delhi]
 +
 +Subject: Application under Section 6 of the RTI Act, 2005 —
 +        Amrit Bharat station redevelopment at [Station name], [State]
 +
 +Sir/Madam,
 +
 +Please furnish the following information on record about the
 +redevelopment of [Station name]:
 +
 +1. A copy of the sanctioned Detailed Project Report (DPR) and the
 +   approval note.
 +2. Name of the contractor, contract value, and date of award.
 +3. The milestone chart and the current physical progress percentage.
 +4. Total expenditure incurred to date, against the sanctioned cost.
 +5. All variation orders issued, with reasons for each.
 +6. Scheduled completion date and any time-extension granted, with reasons.
 +
 +I am depositing the Rs.10 fee by [cash / IPO / online receipt no. ___].
 +
 +Sincerely,
 +[Name], [Address], [Phone]
 +</code>
 +
 +===== Common mistakes =====
 +
 +  - **Filing only at the DRM when the station is with RLDA.** If your station is one of the ~104 RLDA stations, the DRM will send it around and weeks will be lost. Check the RLDA site first for the station list.
 +  - **Asking vague questions.** "Tell me about the station work" gets you a vague reply. Ask for named documents — DPR, variation orders, milestone chart.
 +  - **Forgetting the milestone and variation ask.** These two are where delays and cost jumps hide. Skip them and you get the headline numbers but not the story.
 +  - **Filing to IRSDC.** IRSDC was dissolved in October 2021. Letters to it go nowhere.
 +  - **Missing the 30-day first-appeal window.** If you wait too long after a bad reply, the FAA can reject your appeal as time-barred.
 +
 +===== Pro tips =====
 +
 +  - **File online through rtionline.gov.in** when you can. You get an instant reference number, the fee is paid digitally, and the whole trail is printable for your appeal.
 +  - **Commuter and rail-user associations are effective filers.** A station redevelopment RTI from a registered association often gets a fuller reply than one from an individual, because the railway treats it as organised scrutiny.
 +  - **Ask for "as on [date]" figures.** Expenditure and progress numbers move weekly. Pin them to a date so the reply cannot be brushed off as "old data".
 +  - **Pair station RTI with local-infrastructure RTI.** Stations sit inside cities — approach roads, bus connectivity, and foot overbridges are often a municipal or state matter. See [[rti-to-improve-local-infrastructure|RTI to improve local infrastructure]].
 +
 +===== FAQ =====
 +
 +  * **Q: The station is being rebuilt by a private company under PPP. Can I still use RTI?** Yes. The Railway or RLDA remains the conduit public authority. You file to the railway/RLDA; it pulls the records from the private partner and gives them to you, subject to the bidder-confidentiality limits in Section 8(1)(d) and the third-party notice in Section 11.
 +  * **Q: Can I get a competitor's bid?** Not the confidential commercial parts of an unsuccessful rival's bid. But once the contract is awarded, the winning bidder's name, contract value, and scope are disclosable under Section 4(1)(b).
 +  * **Q: Can I ask about land monetisation around the station?** Yes. RLDA leases railway land for commercial use; the lease terms, premium, and tenure are records you can ask RLDA for.
 +  * **Q: The CPIO says the file is "voluminous". What now?** The RTI Act lets the CPIO charge Rs.2 per A4 page for photocopies after the first pages. Ask for a cost estimate, pay it, and insist on the copies. "Voluminous" is not a ground to refuse.
 +  * **Q: Do I need a lawyer?** No, not for the RTI application or the first two appeals. A lawyer only becomes useful at Step 4 if you are challenging a tender in court.
 +
 +===== Related reading =====
 +  * [[:rti-for-airport-expansion|RTI for airport expansion]]
 +  * [[:rti-for-bus-route-frequency|RTI for bus route frequency]]
 +  * [[rti-for-tender-evaluation|RTI for tender evaluation]]
 +  * [[pio-tender-contract-rti|RTI for tender and contract records]]
 +  * [[tender-details-rti|How to ask for tender details]]
 +  * [[rti-to-improve-local-infrastructure|RTI to improve local infrastructure]]
 +  * [[file-first-appeal-rti-section-19-2026|How to file a first appeal under Section 19]]
 +  * [[file-second-appeal-cic-sic-2026|How to file a second appeal to the CIC]]
 +
 +===== Sources =====
 +  - The Railways (Amendment) Act, 2005 (Act 47 of 2005) — inserted Chapter IIA (Sections 4A-4I, establishing RLDA) into the Railways Act, 1989. PRS full text: prsindia.org.
 +  - Railways Act, 1989 — India Code: indiacode.nic.in.
 +  - Amrit Bharat Station Scheme — PIB press release PRID 1886884 (December 2022); PRID 1983976 (December 2023), confirming ~1,309 stations.
 +  - RLDA — official site: rlda.indianrailways.gov.in.
 +  - IRSDC dissolution (18 October 2021) — Wikipedia summary of Railway Board order.
 +  - DoPT RTI Rules, 2012 — Rs.10 fee FAQ: dopt.gov.in.
 +  - RTI Act, 2005 — India Code: indiacode.nic.in.
 +  - Tata Cellular v. Union of India, (1994) 6 SCC 651 — Indian Kanoon: indiankanoon.org/doc/884513/.
 +  - Prasanta Basuray v. Ministry of Railways, CIC/AD/A/2010/000861 — DRM office as PIO; Indian Kanoon: indiankanoon.org/doc/2353648/.
 +  - Chetan Nisar v. Central Railway, CIC/CRAIL/A/2019/601769 — railway NOC/redevelopment records; Indian Kanoon.
 +  - ABSS progress as of February 2026: 172 completed, 1,165 in progress, ~104 with RLDA, ~98% EPC, 15 under PPP — indianinfrastructure.com.
 +
 +//Last reviewed: 3 July 2026.//
 +
 +{{tag>rti for railway station development citizen-rti rti-template amrit-bharat-station-scheme rlda}}