The Jal Jeevan Mission takes a transparency leap in Uttar Pradesh, allowing every citizen to view drinking water quality data from their homes—online via portals or offline at local points. All testing outcomes will be openly shared, closing the information gap.
During a focused Lucknow trip, Ministry Secretary Ashok Kumar Meena instructed linking the UP JJM site with central dashboards for holistic village-level tracking of schemes, quality metrics, and supplies. Interactive features let users voice concerns and suggestions.
Reviewing statewide efforts, Meena called for accelerated timelines, effective monitoring, and revitalized village committees to own scheme upkeep. His inspection at GosaiGanj’s Chand Sarai village showcased flawless execution: piped water reaching every home, praised as an ideal blueprint.
Conversations with villagers painted a vivid before-and-after: from water scarcity struggles to effortless access, yielding better health, productivity, and community harmony.
This citizen-centric approach in a state serving 25 crore people could redefine rural water governance. Amid rising contamination risks, real-time public data promises vigilant oversight, sustained quality, and mission triumph ahead of deadlines.

