The Chief Minister was presented a memorandum by the two associations in which they kept their demands regarding the formulation of new real estate policy.
Amarinder said he would examine what further steps his government could "legally" take to help the hotel industry recover from the "adverse impact" of the Supreme Court ban on sale of liquor along the highways.
The CM assured this at a meeting with representatives of the two associations, said an official spokesman.
While the real estate sector has been on the downhill for the past several years due to the "destructive" policies of the previous Akali regime, the hotel and restaurant industry has taken a severe hit due to the Supreme Court ban on highway liquor sale, the two delegations pointed out.
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The Chief Minister assured both that his government would look into their problems sympathetically and find judicious solutions.
They also urged regularisation of all colonies, on as is where is basis, for which applications had till date been submitted, besides exemption for plot holders from regularisation fee.
The association further urged scrapping of the condition for NOC for getting plans sanctioned and electric connections installed.
In future, anyone found guilty of creating an unauthorised colony should be stringently punished, they demanded, while seeking the establishment of a state board, with members of the association, to formulate the new real estate policy, as promised in the Congress manifesto.
The hotel & restaurant association members, meanwhile, requested the chief minister to denotify highways falling within municipal corporation/committee jurisdiction to allow sale of liquor in hotels/restaurants/bars situated along these highways, said a press release.
They pointed out that these hotels had been built at huge cost and could not be relocated, and were in any case situated in service lanes, outside the 500 metre criteria laid down by the Supreme Court for ban on liquor sale.
Also, they said in their memorandum, the SC ban, in spirit, related only to the ban of liquor vends and not to such "dignified and well-appointed" places for liquor consumption.
The association representatives noted that similar steps had been taken by the governments in several other states, including Himachal Pradesh, Haryana, Maharashtra, West Bengal and Uttarakhand.
The chief minister said his government would take all possible steps for the revival and protection of both, the real estate and the hotel industries.