u/New-Huckleberry-3176

The Problem Is Not Vidarbha’s Leaders. The Problem Is Mumbai & Pune’s Shadow.
▲ 99 r/MH34_Chandrapur+2 crossposts

The Problem Is Not Vidarbha’s Leaders. The Problem Is Mumbai & Pune’s Shadow.

I am from a Chandrapur, I personally have a theory about why Vidarbha still lags behind Western Maharashtra in terms of development, even though many of Maharashtra’s senior political leaders are from Vidarbha itself- leaders like Devendra Fadnavis ji, Chandrashekhar Bawankule, Vijay Wadettiwar, Sudhir Mungantiwar, and many others who have held some of the most important positions in the state.

Yet despite this representation, Vidarbha still struggles to receive the same level of infrastructure development, planning, investment, and political attention as Western Maharashtra.

And I think the biggest reason is the overwhelming dominance of Mumbai and Pune.

The Mumbai Metropolitan Region alone contributes roughly 35% of Maharashtra’s GDP, while the Pune Metropolitan Region contributes more than 15%.

Together, these two regions account for nearly 30% of the state’s population and an even larger share of its economic activity.

Because of this, once leaders reach top positions in Maharashtra politics and begin handling mega-projects worth lakhs of crores in Mumbai and Pune, they slowly become conditioned to think only at that scale.

Their political and administrative focus naturally starts revolving around those massive urban centers.
As a result, the problems of smaller cities in Vidarbha begin to look “too small” in comparison, even when those problems deeply affect the daily lives of local people.

For example, if an MLA from a city like Chandrapur in Vidarbha asks for ₹300–400 crore for a ring road, flyover network, or urban infrastructure project, it may feel insignificant compared to the massive coastal roads, metro expansions, business districts, airports, and redevelopment projects constantly happening in Mumbai and Pune.

But on the ground, those “small” projects can literally save lives.

In Chandrapur, heavy vehicles constantly pass through the city because of industrial and mining activity, and serious accidents involving trucks have become disturbingly frequent. It has almost become normal for Chandrapurkars to hear every few days that someone died after coming under a heavy vehicle. A proper ring road could divert a huge portion of this traffic away from residential and market areas, reducing accidents and making the city far safer.

Yet because such projects appear “small” compared to Mumbai and Pune-level infrastructure, they often fail to receive the urgency they deserve.

And because of that mindset, many cities in Vidarbha continue to remain secondary priorities.

Now, I am from Chandrapur, and this is my personal experience from observing what kind of treatment a city from Vidarbha often receives from the Maharashtra government.

I even have a personal source who is a very close ally of one of our former local leaders and who was directly in contact with the state high command. According to him, a detailed master plan for Chandrapur was once proposed. It included widening many of the city’s major roads, several of which are currently one-way because of congestion, along with multiple flyovers and other traffic-management infrastructure across the city.
But the proposal was reportedly rejected almost instantly with the argument that “so much investment cannot be made in a small city like Chandrapur.”

Think about how absurd that sounds for a city that contributes enormously to Maharashtra’s economy and infrastructure. Chandrapur contains nearly 30% of the state’s minerals and fossil fuel resources, generates a huge portion of Maharashtra’s electricity, and has one of the highest concentrations of cement plants in the country. This is a city whose people sacrifice their own health, environment, and air quality to power industries and homes across Maharashtra. Yet when it comes to investing in the city’s own infrastructure and quality of life, suddenly it becomes “too small.”

And I think that mindset exists because, from the perspective of the Maharashtra government, cities like Chandrapur are simply distant eastern districts that do not represent major vote banks, but are extremely useful for resource extraction.

What makes this even more frustrating is that Chandrapur is not some economically insignificant district. Despite having a much smaller population than districts in central india like Bhopal (capital city of MP), Amravati, and Akola, Chandrapur’s GDP is still higher than all of them because of its industrial base. It even comes close to Raipur’s (Capital of CG) GDP despite the huge population difference.

Despite contributing so much, the city receives very little in return. And this is exactly why I believe separate Vidarbha deserves serious discussion.

This is not about anti-Maharashtra sentiment, and it is not about linguistic identity either. Both Maharashtra and Vidarbha are Marathi-speaking regions. But sometimes two smaller, more administratively focused states can develop better than one giant state where everything revolves around only two mega-cities.

Just look at Telangana-Andhra Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh-Chhattisgarh.

If Chhattisgarh had never separated from Madhya Pradesh, India probably would not have seen the rise of major developing cities like Raipur and Bilaspur the way we see today. Separation allowed governance and investment to become more region-focused.

Similarly, after Telangana separated, Andhra Pradesh was forced to shift its focus away from Hyderabad and start building its own independent growth centers. Cities like Visakhapatnam (Vizag), which earlier lived in Hyderabad’s shadow, are now receiving major recognition, IT investments, and even some of the largest data center projects in India. Andhra Pradesh is also developing a new greenfield capital with modern planning and infrastructure.

That happened because their leadership can now fully concentrate on Andhra Pradesh’s own development instead of everything revolving around Hyderabad.
I believe the same principle applies to Vidarbha.

As long as Mumbai and Pune continue to dominate Maharashtra politically, economically, administratively, and psychologically, the rest of the state especially Vidarbha will continue to struggle to receive equal attention, no matter how much it contributes.

u/Due_Patient69 — 4 days ago

This city getting more and more dangerous day-by-day
Today I was driving my car on zilla parishad road and suddenly the car infront of stopped so I braked my car immediately and slowly traffic started to pile up behind me and suddenly a guy on a bullet behind me started cussing and hitting on my car "saying abey saale jaldi nikal naa" and when traffic started moving, he came beside me and started staring me and following me, so i opened my window and asked "kya hogya bhai?" and out of nowhere he started yelling "tune mereko la#da bola, ruk abhi dikhata hun" and started video recording my car and then pulled a small metal rod from his bike and started hitting my car while driving, so i sped up and escaped from there, but now i'm very scared because this psycho has my car's number and my car is registered on my dad's name, what if he somehow finds my dad alone somewhere and comes with multiple goons together and does something to my dad. this guy was looking like a proper goon and he was probably drunk at that time. I'm very scared, what should i do?

reddit.com
u/New-Huckleberry-3176 — 14 days ago

Please read the whole thing, this isn’t a rant - just pointing out a missed opportunity.

Chandrapur, a tier-3 city, has very limited sports facilities. No quality public swimming pools, football grounds, or proper courts for tennis and badminton. For most kids here, access to good infrastructure is almost nonexistent.

At the same time, we have Sainik School Chandrapur (owned by Ministry of defence) with excellent, near world-class sports facilities. But unless you’re enrolled there, it’s completely inaccessible to the public.

When it was inaugurated, it was presented as a big development for the city and gift to people of Chandrapur. But what does Chandrapur actually gain if such a huge asset remains closed off to the local public?

I bet most people don’t even know that this type of sports infrastructure is present in our city and have never seen these images.

This isn’t about taking anything away from the school, just using resources which are made using people’s tax money in a better way and make the most of the facilities we have.

City’s local Authorities should Co-ordinate with the sainik school and organize:

• City-level leagues (football, badminton, tennis, etc.).

• Inter-school matches for other local private-public schools.

• Limited access on rent during unused hours/days.

It’s a obvious fact that these facilities are not in use 24/7 by Sainik School. Sharing them could benefit thousands of students, boost sports culture in the city, and even create small economic opportunities and even the school could earn from thru rent and cheap entry tickets to the matches (parents will obviously want to see their child play, so they would willingly buy the tickets).

Right now, we have world-class infrastructure behind walls, while the city struggles for basic facilities. That gap shouldn’t exist.

Would love to know if something like this is even possible.

u/New-Huckleberry-3176 — 17 days ago