The Delhi Development Authority (DDA) will conduct a draw of lots for 16,000 flats on April 18. However, the nearly
7.5 lakh applicants will have to wait a day more to know the results.
For the first time in its history, the draw will not be conducted at the DDA headquarters in Vikas Sadan but the office of the Centre for Development of Advanced Computing (CDAC) in Noida. “The draw is going to be really huge in scope. We have never had the kind of numbers that we have now, with 16,000 flats and 7.5 lakh applicants. The DDA does not have the kind of computing capability that is required for a lottery of this size,” a senior DDA official said.
The official said the draw will be conducted by the DDA itself, using computing equipment provided by the CDAC. Incidentally, CDAC was one of the prime agencies involved in investigating DDA’s last draw held in 2008, which landed in a major controversy over allegations of anomalies in the draw procedure.
However, the DDA official clarified that the decision to conduct the draw in the CDAC’s premises had nothing to do with the controversy, and was instead based on the fact that DDA’s software cannot deal with a number as large as the one involved in this draw.
Again, breaking from tradition, neither the applicants nor the media will be privy to the draw procedure, as is usually the case. “The CDAC campus is not very large, and there will be heavy security while the draw is underway. A screen in the CDAC hallway will broadcast the procedure, but only accredited personnel will be allowed access even to the hallway. However, there will be neutral observers — senior bureaucrats and a senior journalist — who will be invited to observe the draw,” the official added.
While the draw itself is unlikely to take more than a couple of hours, applicants will have to wait till the next day to see the results on the DDA website as well as major national newspapers. And with the shadow of the 2008 controversy hanging over the draw, the DDA is keen on ensuring that there are no snags in the system.
7.5 lakh applicants will have to wait a day more to know the results.
For the first time in its history, the draw will not be conducted at the DDA headquarters in Vikas Sadan but the office of the Centre for Development of Advanced Computing (CDAC) in Noida. “The draw is going to be really huge in scope. We have never had the kind of numbers that we have now, with 16,000 flats and 7.5 lakh applicants. The DDA does not have the kind of computing capability that is required for a lottery of this size,” a senior DDA official said.
The official said the draw will be conducted by the DDA itself, using computing equipment provided by the CDAC. Incidentally, CDAC was one of the prime agencies involved in investigating DDA’s last draw held in 2008, which landed in a major controversy over allegations of anomalies in the draw procedure.
However, the DDA official clarified that the decision to conduct the draw in the CDAC’s premises had nothing to do with the controversy, and was instead based on the fact that DDA’s software cannot deal with a number as large as the one involved in this draw.
Again, breaking from tradition, neither the applicants nor the media will be privy to the draw procedure, as is usually the case. “The CDAC campus is not very large, and there will be heavy security while the draw is underway. A screen in the CDAC hallway will broadcast the procedure, but only accredited personnel will be allowed access even to the hallway. However, there will be neutral observers — senior bureaucrats and a senior journalist — who will be invited to observe the draw,” the official added.
While the draw itself is unlikely to take more than a couple of hours, applicants will have to wait till the next day to see the results on the DDA website as well as major national newspapers. And with the shadow of the 2008 controversy hanging over the draw, the DDA is keen on ensuring that there are no snags in the system.
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