MUMBAI, April 6 -- The long-pending redevelopment of LIC-owned buildings in South Mumbai listed as "dangerous and dilapidated" has gained momentum after cabinet minister Mangal Prabhat Lodha met union finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman in New Delhi last Thursday and raised the concerns of 10,000 affected tenants. A formal letter submitted by the LIC Tenants and Occupants Welfare Association (LTOWA), urging urgent intervention to fast-track redevelopment and ensure the safety of residents, was also submitted to the minister. Hundreds of families continue to live in unsafe conditions in several LIC- and Dena Bank-owned buildings across South Mumbai, many of them nearly 90 years old. A total of 25 cessed buildings of LIC are under the C1 category. Around 45,000 people pass through these buildings daily and 10,000 people reside in them. Mhada has issued notices in several cases, leading to partial evacuation of the structures. With the monsoon approaching, concerns regarding safety and rehabilitation have intensified. Lodha has been consistently pursuing the issue for the past four years through coordination with Mhada, LIC and the central government. During his meeting with Sitharaman, he submitted the memorandum from LTOWA, and highlighted the prolonged delays in the redevelopment process, particularly the pending appointment of Project Management Consultants (PMCs) for the buildings. LIC officials had earlier indicated that the PMC appointment and redevelopment process could take up to two years, raising serious safety concerns among tenants, a fact reiterated by LTOWA secretary Ramesh Nirmal Jain in his letter to the finance minister. Jain pointed out that tenants residing in multiple LIC-owned buildings in Mumbai were facing grave risks due to the lack of on-ground progress in redevelopment. He pointed out that although tenders for PMC appointments had been floated, no concrete action had taken place. Procedural delays, he pointed out, were unacceptable when human lives were at stake. "Lodha told us that the finance minister has given instructions to redevelop old buildings as per Mhada rules, and the C1 category (buildings unfit for habitation) should be taken up on priority," Jain told HT. "LIC issued a tender to appoint a project management consultant in November 2025 for New Badamwadi on Lamington Road and for Angrewadi Chawl in Girgaon on March 13 but a PMC has not been appointed in either." The letter urged the finance minister to ensure the fast-tracking of the redevelopment process, fair valuation of LIC properties in line with Mhada norms, and immediate invitation of tenders from capable developers. It also demanded that tenant associations be allowed to propose credible developers to accelerate the process. One of the key demands raised by the tenants' association and LIC Angrewadi leadership include suspension of rent for vacated buildings, halting evictions until actual redevelopment begins. Lodha expressed gratitude to finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman for her assurance and conveyed confidence that tenants living in LIC and bank-owned buildings would soon receive justice and housing security. An affected tenant, however, said that many such verbal assurances given in the past but there should be a gazetted notification on this....