RTI Activist Flags Escalating Parking Crisis at GMC & SMGS Hospitals; Seeks Urgent Multi-Tier Parking to Prevent Systemic Breakdown
||Black and White Digital News ||
||Parvinder Singh November 30,2025||
JAMMU: The parking crisis at Jammu’s premier healthcare institutions—Government Medical College (GMC) Jammu and SMGS Hospital—has reached a tipping point, prompting RTI and social activist Balvinder Singh to issue a strong appeal to the State Government and the Hon’ble Chief Minister, Sh. Omar Abdullah. Singh’s statement reflects mounting public frustration over a chronic infrastructural deficit that has now started to impede healthcare delivery, emergency response, and basic public mobility in the region.
1. Infrastructure Growth Without Parallel Support Systems
Both GMC Jammu and SMGS Hospital have witnessed substantial expansions in medical capacity over the past decade:
• GMC Jammu: From 500 beds to 1,066 beds.
• SMGS Hospital: From 150 beds to 750 beds, with an additional 250 beds expected soon.
This rapid growth underscores significant improvements in healthcare infrastructure—but simultaneously exposes a glaring gap in supportive infrastructure, particularly parking, which has seen little to no expansion. Without adequate parking, the hospitals’ ability to serve a growing patient population becomes compromised.
2. Existing Parking Measures: Sincere but Insufficient
Mr. Singh acknowledges that hospital authorities have made earnest attempts to optimize the available parking spaces. However, these efforts are insufficient for the sheer volume of patients, attendants, staff, and emergency vehicles that visit these institutions daily.
With bed capacity more than doubling in GMC and nearly quintupling in SMGS, the corresponding rise in footfall and vehicular traffic has overwhelmed existing arrangements.
3. Congestion Spillover: Public Hardship & Enforcement Issues
Due to the acute shortage of designated parking:
• Vehicles spill onto approach roads, bylanes, and ‘No Parking’ zones.
• Visitors often receive challans for wrong parking, even when no legal alternative is available.
• Ambulances and emergency vehicles face delays, hampering emergency response.
• Traffic congestion around the hospital premises has become routine, affecting not just patients but daily commuters as well.
This spillover effect demonstrates how overlooked infrastructure planning can disrupt not only hospital functioning but the broader urban ecosystem.
4. Multi-Tier Parking: A Long-Pending, Sustainable Solution
Singh emphasizes that multi-tier (multi-level) parking facilities at both GMC and SMGS are not optional—they are essential. Multi-tier structures offer:
• Space-efficient vertical expansion
• Long-term capacity aligned with future growth
• Reduction in roadway congestion
• Improved access for emergency services
• Enhanced overall hospital environment
Such projects have become standard in major Indian cities where hospital and commercial traffic is dense. Their absence in Jammu’s key hospitals highlights a serious planning gap.
5. Critical Stage of Crisis: A Call for Immediate Government Action
According to Mr. Singh, the parking crisis is no longer a matter of inconvenience—it is a public safety issue. As patient numbers continue to rise, especially with Jammu acting as a major healthcare hub for surrounding districts, the situation will worsen unless decisive action is taken.
He urges the government, Health Department, and Chief Minister Omar Abdullah to prioritize multi-tier parking in the larger public interest, ensuring:
• Smooth vehicular flow
• Reduced public harassment
• Enhanced accessibility to healthcare
• Support to hospital operations that rely on quick mobility of staff and emergency transport
6. Long-Term Urban Planning Implications
The crisis also raises broader concerns about urban planning in Jammu. Hospital expansions must be paired with supporting infrastructure—parking, roads, public transport links, and emergency routes. Failure to adopt holistic planning leads to precisely the kind of gridlock now seen at GMC and SMGS.
Balvinder Singh’s statement brings to light a problem that has been overlooked for far too long. With patient inflow and infrastructural expansion accelerating, parking facilities at GMC Jammu and SMGS Hospital urgently need modernization. The activist’s warning serves as both a reminder and a call to action for the government to address a systemic issue that affects thousands daily. Building multi-tier parking is not just a convenience—it is a critical necessity for ensuring efficient, accessible, and safe healthcare delivery in Jammu & Kashmir.