CM Sai Directs Revenue Dept to Expand Digital Land Services
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Chhattisgarh Chief Minister Vishnu Deo Sai on Wednesday, 8 July 2026, chaired a review meeting of the state Revenue Department and directed officials to expand digital services, improve transparency, and make revenue administration more accountable to citizens — with a particular focus on simplifying land-related services for farmers and residents.
Context
Posting on X in Hindi, Chief Minister Sai stated: 'नागरिकों के लिए सरल, सुगम और पारदर्शी राजस्व व्यवस्था सुनिश्चित करना हमारी सरकार की प्राथमिकता है' — 'Ensuring a simple, accessible, and transparent revenue system for citizens is our government's priority.' He added that directions were issued at the revenue department review meeting to expand digital services and make revenue administration more effective, transparent, and accountable.
The Chief Minister further emphasised that the government's continuous effort is to use technology to ensure that farmers and residents of the state receive land-related services in a simple, time-bound manner without any difficulty.
Policy Backdrop
The push aligns with the Digital India Land Records Modernization Programme, a centrally sponsored scheme launched in 2008 that computerised land records across states to reduce disputes and cut out middlemen. Chhattisgarh, like several other states, has progressively integrated e-governance tools into its revenue administration over the past decade.
Indian states have increasingly adopted digital platforms for land mutation, record-of-rights issuance, and grievance redressal. CM Sai, who assumed office in December 2023, has framed technology-enabled governance as a central plank of his administration's approach to citizen service delivery.
Stakeholders and Impact
The primary beneficiaries of an expanded digital revenue system would be farmers and rural citizens across Chhattisgarh, who frequently interact with revenue offices for land ownership records, mutation requests, and tenancy documentation. Delays and opacity in these processes have historically been a source of grievance in the state.
A more accountable revenue administration could reduce dependence on intermediaries, lower the time cost of obtaining official land documents, and curb opportunities for corruption at the local patwari and tehsil level — longstanding concerns in land governance across India.
What's Next
Observers will watch for a phased rollout of expanded digital portals or mobile applications covering services such as mutation, record-of-rights, and grievance redressal. The state government's ability to reduce processing times and measure outcomes will be a key indicator of whether the directions issued at Wednesday's review meeting translate into on-ground change for Chhattisgarh's farming communities and rural population.