CM Dhami Sanctions ₹8.61 Cr for Power, Disaster Relief
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Chief Minister Pushkar Singh Dhami of Uttarakhand on 1 July 2026 granted financial and administrative approvals worth a combined ₹8.61 crore to strengthen basic infrastructure and provide immediate relief to families whose homes were destroyed by natural disasters in the state.
Context
The Chief Minister's Office announced two distinct approvals. The first sanctions ₹4.92 crore for bunch cabling work being carried out by the electricity department in areas of the Dehradun Cantonment legislative assembly constituency that currently lack this modern power distribution system. The second sanctions ₹3.69 crore from the Chief Minister's Relief Fund at a rate of ₹3.00 lakh per house for 123 residential buildings that were completely destroyed by disaster, with a government order (shासनादेश) also issued simultaneously.
The relief covers affected families in villages Dharali and Harsil under Tehsil Bhatwari, and in the areas of Tehsil Dunda, Chinyalisaur, Barkot and Mori in Uttarkashi district.
Policy Backdrop
Uttarakhand's fragile Himalayan terrain makes it one of India's most disaster-prone states, with recurrent floods, cloudbursts and landslides causing significant damage every monsoon season. The Chief Minister's Relief Fund has been the standard administrative instrument for rapid house-damage compensation, allowing disbursals to be authorised without waiting for supplementary budget sessions.
Bunch cabling — a form of insulated aerial bundled cable used in power distribution — is part of a broader push to modernise electricity networks and reduce weather-related outages in both urban and remote hill areas. Bringing such infrastructure to underserved pockets of Dehradun Cantonment reflects a parallel effort to close urban service gaps alongside rural disaster response.
Stakeholders and Impact
The 123 families in Uttarkashi whose homes were fully destroyed stand to receive direct cash compensation of ₹3.00 lakh each, providing an immediate financial floor as they begin reconstruction. Uttarkashi district, situated in the upper Himalayas near the Gangotri region, is among the areas most frequently affected by glacial and monsoon-season hazards.
Residents in the bunch-cable-deprived zones of Dehradun Cantonment are expected to benefit from more reliable electricity supply once the ₹4.92 crore project is completed. Improved power distribution in cantonment areas also has implications for commercial and institutional consumers in the locality.
CM Dhami stated that the state government 'stands with disaster-affected families with full sensitivity and commitment,' and that the government 'is continuously working to provide timely relief to affected families as well as to strengthen basic facilities across the state.'
What's Next
With the government order for the Uttarkashi relief already issued, attention will now shift to the speed of actual disbursement to the 123 identified households and the timeline for completion of the Dehradun Cantonment bunch cabling project. Observers will watch whether the ongoing monsoon season triggers further approvals from the Chief Minister's Relief Fund as damage assessments are completed across other vulnerable districts. Any supplementary budget allocations for disaster mitigation infrastructure in the next legislative session will be a key indicator of the state's medium-term resilience strategy.