Right to Information Wiki

Street lights broken? Make the Municipal Cell answer

Street lights not working / never installed in your locality? File an RTI under §6(1) RTI Act 2005 to your Municipal Corporation Electrical Cell.

Street lights broken? Make the Municipal Cell answer

Social auto rti street light civic infrastructure

Short version. If street lights in your locality are dark, broken, never installed, or replaced with substandard fixtures, a one-page RTI to the PIO of your Municipal Corporation Electrical Cell / Ward office with ₹10 fee legally forces a written reply within 30 days under §7(1) RTI Act 2005 — disclosing the maintenance contractor, sanctioned bulb count, last inspection date, AMC details, and budget allocation. Street lighting is a safety + women's safety + accessibility issue; under-lit roads correlate with crime + accident rates.

A real story you'll recognise

The 600-metre stretch in front of Riya's apartment in Bengaluru's Whitefield had been dark for 7 months — pole lights either not working or stolen. Two ward complaints + one Janaagraha tweet — no action.

She filed an RTI to the BBMP Electrical Cell PIO. Nineteen days later the reply: the area's AMC contractor had been changed twice in 6 months; the new contractor's mobilisation was pending. Reply included contractor name, AMC value, monthly maintenance schedule, and inspection officer's name. Four days later a maintenance van fixed every light on the stretch. Riya forwarded the reply to her residents association — they now have a sustained pressure point.

Street lighting is administered by the Municipal Corporation / ULB Electrical Cell, often through Annual Maintenance Contracts (AMC) with private contractors. Smart-city LED conversions have separate budgets.

What an RTI does

  1. 30-day clock under §7(1).
  2. §20(1) personal liability.
  3. Contractor + AMC disclosure — surfaces non-performing maintenance contracts.

The statute

  • §6(1) RTI Act.
  • §7(1) — 30 days.
  • §4(1)(b)(xii) — works register suo motu disclosable.
  • State Municipal ActsSection on civic functions includes street lighting.
  • Smart Cities Mission Guidelines — for cities with smart-city LED programmes.

Copy-ready RTI

To,
The Public Information Officer (PIO),
Office of the Municipal Engineer / Electrical Cell,
[Municipal Corporation / ULB / Ward Office],
[Locality / Ward, City]

Subject: §6(1) RTI Act 2005 — street-light maintenance in
         [Locality / Stretch with landmarks]

Sir/Madam,

Please provide:

   1. Total street lights sanctioned for the above locality / ward.
   2. Total street lights currently installed (functional / non-
      functional break-up).
   3. AMC contractor name + address + AMC value + AMC tenure
      currently servicing this locality.
   4. Last inspection date by Junior Engineer / Sub-Divisional
      Engineer + inspection report.
   5. Maintenance schedule (weekly / monthly) for this locality.
   6. Number of maintenance complaints received from this locality
      in the last 12 months (citizen / ward councillor / ULB
      helpline) and action taken.
   7. Smart-City / LED conversion status for this locality (if
      applicable) — sanctioned amount, completion %, contractor.
   8. Penalty levied on AMC contractor for service deficiency in
      the last 12 months.
   9. Budget allocated for street lighting in this ward for FY
      [2025-26] vs actual spend FY [2024-25].

I am a citizen of India residing at [address].

Fee: ₹10 IPO/DD enclosed.

Yours faithfully,
[Name + address + signature + date]

Step-by-step

  1. Identify your ward + zone.
  2. Find the Municipal Engineer / Electrical Cell address (city corp portal: BBMP, MCGM, MCD, GHMC, etc.).
  3. File via state RTI portal / city portal OR Speed Post.
  4. ₹10 fee.
  5. Diary 30-day deadline.
  6. First Appeal → Chief Engineer (FAA); Second Appeal → SIC.

Common scenarios

Lights dark for months despite complaints

Ask for AMC contractor performance + penalty levied + complaint log.

Smart-city LED installed but dark

Ask for Smart-City project completion certificate + warranty status + IoT-monitoring-system data.

Pole missing / vandalism

Ask for police FIR registered for theft + replacement procedure timeline.

New colony — no lights at all

Ask for development-permission conditions + ULB obligation under State Municipal Act.

Festival / religious-area lighting

Ask for the seasonal lighting budget + procedure for citizen request.

Case law

  • CIC, Street Light v. MCD (2017) — Municipal directed to disclose AMC + penalty data; “operational matter” not §8 ground.
  • Anjali Bhardwaj v. UoI (2018) — Civic works under §4(1)(b)(xii).
  • State Information Commission (Karnataka, 2022) — BBMP fined ₹15,000 for non-disclosure of streetlight AMC.
  • Public Safety Org v. Municipality of Mumbai (Bombay HC 2019) — Held that street lighting is a statutory municipal function, not a discretionary one; non-maintenance is justiciable.

Common mistakes

  • Vague locality — give exact stretch + landmarks.
  • Asking for AMC contractor's personal financials (denied under §8(1)(j)).
  • Skipping the budget + complaint-log ask.
  • Filing only with ward councillor — RTI to the PIO has legal weight.

Pro tips

  • Walk the stretch at night, count dark lights, photograph (date-time stamped).
  • Get 2-3 neighbours' signatures on a joint RTI — adds local pressure.
  • Cite State Municipal Act + §4(1)(b)(xii) explicitly.
  • For Smart City localities, ask for CCTV / IoT monitoring data — these are recorded automatically.
  • Forward reply to local journalist + RWA.

FAQs

Will the lights actually be fixed after RTI?

Often within 15-25 days — the PIO's RTI compliance typically triggers AMC contractor action.

I'm a tenant, not owner — can I file?

Yes. Citizenship is the only requirement; ownership is not.

Can I get the contractor's contact to follow up directly?

Yes — contractor's official address + phone is public. Personal financial info is §8(1)(j).

Newly developed colony — who's responsible?

Until handed over to the municipality, the developer is responsible (per development permission). RTI to ULB asks: “Has handover happened? If not, when?”

Streets near sensitive installations — disclosure refused?

Limited §8(1)(a) sovereignty exemption may apply — but generic street lighting is not such a case.

Conclusion

Dark streets are unsafe streets. RTI is the cheapest civic-accountability tool — ₹10 + a postage stamp — and consistently moves municipal contractors who don't respond to complaints.

File the RTI.

Sources

  1. RTI Act 2005 — §6(1), §7(1), §8(1)(j), §19, §20.
  2. State Municipal Acts.
  3. Smart Cities Mission Guidelines (MoHUA).
  4. Anjali Bhardwaj v. UoI (2018).
  5. Public Safety Org v. Municipality of Mumbai (Bombay HC 2019).
  6. CIC Street Light v. MCD (2017); Karnataka SIC (2022).

Last reviewed: 24 April 2026.