Action First, Talks Later: How IAS officer Manisha Khatri ss taking Nashik's monsoon preparedness to streets

By replacing review-room governance with field leadership, Nashik Municipal Commissioner Manisha Khatri is attempting to redefine how cities prepare for the monsoon.

For most urban local bodies, the monsoon begins with review meetings, presentations and emergency control rooms. For IAS officer Manisha Khatri, Municipal Commissioner of Nashik, preparedness begins on the ground.

This monsoon, the Nashik Municipal Corporation (NMC) has launched an integrated Monsoon Task Force, an initiative that reflects Khatri's vision that civic administration must be visible where citizens need it the most.

Built on a simple philosophy of “Action First, Talks Later” the initiative shifts the focus from reactive governance to preventive action. Rather than waiting for complaints of waterlogging, overflowing drains or damaged roads, the civic administration has mobilised multidisciplinary teams across the city to identify and resolve issues before they escalate.

A key feature of the initiative that senior municipal officers lead from the front. Across all six municipal divisions, officers are spending time in the field alongside engineers, sanitation workers and technical staff, monitoring works, interacting with citizens and taking decisions on the spot.

The Corporation has constituted six dedicated Monsoon Task Forces, one each for Panchavati, Nashik East, Nashik West, Nashik Road, New Nashik and Satpur. Equipped with engineers, field personnel, JCBs, cranes, tippers and technical resources, each team follows a ward-wise schedule to undertake focused interventions across the city.

The scope of the campaign goes far beyond routine drain cleaning. The task forces are simultaneously desilting storm-water drains, repairing potholes, addressing pipeline leakages and water supply issues, removing dangerous tree branches, cleaning garbage hotspots, undertaking fogging and mosquito-control measures, vaccinating stray dogs and responding to other public health and civic concerns associated with the rainy season.

Another notable aspect of approach is the institutionalised coordination between the administration, elected representatives and citizens. Local corporators are directly connected with the task force teams, enabling neighbourhood-level issues to be communicated and resolved quickly without unnecessary procedural delays.

The model reflects a larger shift in urban governance from departmental functioning to integrated field administration. Instead of individual departments working in silos, engineering, sanitation, health and disaster preparedness teams are operating as one coordinated unit.

For Commissioner Manisha Khatri, the objective is straightforward: prevent problems instead of merely responding to them.As cities across India face increasingly intense rainfall and climate-related urban challenges, Nashik's approach demonstrates how proactive planning, coordinated execution and sustained field engagement can strengthen urban resilience, preventing problems before citizens experience them.

 

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