Telangana Chief Minister A Revanth Reddy has asked senior bureaucrats to ensure that no government department continues to function from rented premises, directing them to seek adequate allocations in the upcoming Budget 2026 for construction of permanent office buildings.
The instruction came during a high-level review at the Dr B.R. Ambedkar Telangana State Secretariat, where the Chief Minister discussed the upcoming 99-day ‘Praja Palana–Pragathi Pranalika’ (People’s Governance–Growth Plan) scheduled from March 6 to June 12. He urged department heads to craft their “best programmes” and focus on measurable outcomes.
Emphasising administrative efficiency, the CM called for wider use of technology to streamline welfare delivery and ensure benefits reach eligible citizens. He pushed for strengthening e-filing systems to speed up decision-making and insisted that MoUs and investment commitments be translated into on-ground progress.
On urban planning, Revanth Reddy highlighted the structured trifurcation of GHMC and asked officials to prepare for expansion of the manufacturing sector across a proposed 10,000 sq km urban region. He also reiterated the importance of the proposed 30,000-acre “Future City” project, describing it as a long-term economic driver.
The Chief Minister directed departments to explain the Musi river rejuvenation initiative to the public, accelerate plans for 100 Telangana Public Schools, and enhance healthcare services with region-specific medical data. He further set June 2, Telangana Formation Day, as a deadline to ensure all government offices maintain high cleanliness standards.
The push for permanent infrastructure and digital governance signals an effort to project administrative reform. However, timely budget allocation and execution will determine whether these directives translate into tangible outcomes on the ground.