District Skill Development Plan for BAREILLY
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SKILL GAP ASSESSMENT & ACTION PLAN FOR BAREILLY District Skill Development Plan for BAREILLY 1 District Name :Bareilly Table of Contents 1. As is Scenario……………………………………………………………………... 4 2. Introduction ……………………………………………………………………… 5-8 3. District at Sight…………………………………………………………………… 9-11 4. Economic Profile………………………………………………………………… 12-15 5. Target Population and Population 2011-Bareilly District ……………………… 15-16 6. Mapping Current Infra (Summary of Skill Development Training Partners) …… 17-18 7. School/ College ITT Infra………………………………………………………… 19 8. SWOT Analysis…………………………………………………………………… 23-24 9. Aggregate Demand in Employment Sector ……………………………………… 25-30 10. Aggregate Demand in Self Employment……………………………………………31 11. Major Apprenticeship Opportunities in District and Migration…………………. 32-33 12. Key Gaps Analysis………………………………………………………………… 34 13. Analysis of Current Skill Development in District……………………………… 35-36 14. Action Plan: Goal and RPL Plan………………………………………………… 39-40 15. Top 5 Initiatives for District Skilling……………………………………………… 41 16. Other Support Activities………………………………………………………… 43-44 2 District Name Bareilly State Uttar Pradesh Year 2020-21 As – Is Scenario Aggregate Demand • Map the District Map the Primary Demand • Topography Agriculture – Major Crops Animal Husbandry • Climate Horticulture • Economic Profile Poultry Others • Literacy Producer Groups/ SHG • Population Map the Secondary Demand Major manufacturing clusters • Identify the Target Population Base Products/ Trade • Population of District Map the Service/ Tertiary Sector Retail • Rural Urban Tourism • Gender Others Map the Traditional Arts and Crafts • Large Towns/ Villages SHG • Map the Infra Map emerging sectors IT • Skill Training Centres across Self-Employment opportunity schemes and departments long and short term • Current Courses and performance (E/T/P) Analyse the Gap Action Plan What’s the SWOT for the district • Develop Execution plan (skill and livelihood ecosystem • Baseline data perspective) ? What are the Demand Supply Gaps – • What are we trying to achieve through this aggregate and block level? activity(physical and other targets) Migration – Inward and Outward? • Target audience/beneficiary Identify Sectors roles and courses Knowledge Partners TPs Budget and other resources Develop monitoring and evaluation plan& templates Perceived risks and mitigation strategies 3 District Name :Bareilly Source :- https://censusindia.gov.in/2011census/dchb/DCHB_A/09/0919_PART_A_DCHB_BAREILLY.pdf What is unique about this district with respect to other districts in the state/ country? District Bareilly ranks 9th in terms of population in the state. The percentage share of urban population in the district is 35.3 percent as against 22.3 percent of the population in urban areas of the state. Bareilly district has population density of 1,080 persons per sq.km., which is higher than the state average 829 persons per sq. km. Bareilly district ranks 44th in terms of sex ratio 887, which is less than the state average of 912females per thousand males. Bareilly district ranks 65th in literacy with 58.5 percent, which is lower than the state average 67.7 percent. There are 196 uninhabited villages out of a total of 2,051 villages in the district. Decadal growth rate of the district 22.9 percent is higher than the state average of 20.2 percent. Baheri tehsil has the highest number of inhabited villages 385, while Meerganj tehsil has the lowest number (217) of inhabited villages . The district has 31 towns out of them 21 are statutory and 10 census towns. Neither any statutory town has been added, merged nor declassified after 2001 census. There are 756,784 households in the district accounting for 2.3 percent of the total households in the state. The average size of households in the district is 5.9 persons. Administrative Setup in Bareilly: District Bareilly is situated in north-west portion of Uttar Pradesh. The district is administratively divided into 06 tehsils namely Aonla, Baheri, Bareilly, Faridpur, Nawabganj and Meerganj. For implementation and monitoring of development scheme the district is divided into 15 Development Blocks namely Shergarh, Richa, Baheri, Nawabganj, Bhadpura, Mirganj, Fatehganj Pashchimi, Bhojipura, Kyara, Bithrichampur, Ramnagar, Alampur Jafarabad, Majhgawan, Faridpur, and Bhutta. Total area of the district is 4120.0 Sq. Km. The rural area covers 3841.9 Sq. Km. and urban recorded 278.1 Sq. Km. There are 1007 Gram Panchayats and 2051 Revenue villages with 1855 inhabited villages and 196 uninhabited villages in the district. In urban area there are 21 statutory Towns and 10 Census Towns. Statutory Towns comprises of 01 Nagar Nigam (Municipal Corporation), 04 Nagar Palika Parishad, 15 Nagar Panchayats and 01 cantonment Board. 4 Source :- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bareilly LOCATION, AREA AND BOUNDARIES The district of Bareilly lies between Lat.28º 1' & 28º 54' N and Long. 78º 58' & 79º 47' E, running over a distance of about 60 miles from North to South and about 47 miles from East to West, and covering an area of approximately 1578 square miles. The Municipal Corporation covers an area of 10.573 square kms.(as per 1999 census). The Northern boundary of the district is contiguous with that of Nainital district, on the East lies the district of Pilibhit and on the South- East, Shahajahanpur district. On the South and South-West, it is bounded by the district of Badaun, the Ramganga river forming the natural boundary between the two districts for about 19 miles. On the West lies the district of Rampur. POPULATION As per the 2011 census, the population of the district is 4434359 comprising of about 54% male population and 46% females. The literacy percentage of the district is about 60.52%. Industries B.L. Agro Refinery at Parsakhera. The Parsakhera Industrial Estate was established by UPSIDC in 1980. Bareilly was a flourishing cotton centre in early nineteenth century. There were about 20,000 looms in the city in 1802, with a production value of Rs 30,00,000 per year. Robert Glyn, the then Magistrate of Bareilly asked GhulamYahya to write an account of "craftsmen, the names of tools of manufacture and production and their dress and manners". The most popular trades in and around Bareilly during the 1820s were manufacturing glass, jewellery, glass and lac bangles and gold and silver thread, crimping, bean drying, wire drawing, charpoy weaving, keeping a grocer's shop and selling kebabs. The city witnessed rapid growth in trade and commerce, transport and other socio-economic activities after the construction of Railway lines in the early twentieth century. Several factories, including the National Brewery Company, a match factory, an ice factory and a steam-powered flour mill were established in the city in first decade of the century. The Indian Wood Products Limited was established in Izzatnagar in 1919, where Catechu 5 District Name :Bareilly was produced on a large scale. A number of industries such as the Indian Turpentine & Rosin (founded in 1926) and the Western Indian Match Company (WIMCO; founded in 1937) were also established at C.B. Ganj, located at a distance of 8 km from the city center. HR Sugar Factory was established in Nekpur in 1932. As a result, Bareilly emerged as a major industrial and commercial area of the region by the 1940s, with many banks and educational institutions being established in every corner of the city. IFFCO plant at Aonla The industrial development of the city continued after the independence of India in 1947 and small scale industries related to khandsari, furniture, engineering and oil extraction began to take shape in Shahamatganj and NaiBasti. Industrial estates were established by the UP State Industrial Development Corporation (UPSIDC) in CB Ganj in 1958, Parsakhera in 1980 and in Bhojipura in 1979. CB Ganj and Ijjat Nagar had by this time established themselves as major industrial and industrial-cum-transport centers of the city respectively, while the Shahamatganj and Qila markets were among the largest in Bareilly and surrounding areas. By the 1960s and 1980s, several markets were built around residential areas located on the Qutubkhana-railway junction road, of which Subhash Market, Chaupula, Punjabi and Kishore Markets were among the prominent ones. According to the 1971 census of India, Bareilly was a City board of Ist category, and was ranked 9th in the state by importance. The economy here relied on the industrial-cum-service sector; A large number of workers were engaged in activities that were closely related either to industry or to tertiary sectors. By the end of the 1990s many industries in the city were shut down. The Indian Turpentine & Rosin Factory (ITR) was shut down in April 1998 and the sugar mill of Nekpur ceased production in September 1998.The mill, which was under the control of the UP Sugar Corporation had been awarded a gold medal for producing sugar more than the set target in the year 1997 itself.[35] A rubber factory situated in Fatehganj West was also closed on 15 July 1999. The products of the factory were famous all over Asia, and about two thousand people were serving in this factory.The WIMCO factory in CB Ganj, which used to supply matches across the country, was shut down in 2014. Indian Farmers Fertiliser Cooperative (IFFCO) has a large plant at Aonla (30 km). The plant was commissioned in 1988 and expanded in 1996. It produces ammonia and urea. 6 Agriculture The cropping pattern in the district consists of three harvests Kharif, Rabi and Zaid, the first has always been the most important. The Kharif crop occupied more than 75 per cent of the cultivated area. The main crops under Kharif are Paddy, Juar, Maizeetc. Rabi is the next important harvest in the district. It occupied more than 55 per cent of the cultivated area the main crops are Wheat, Pea, Gram, Mustard etc. Zaid, the third extra harvest of the district has always covered less than 2 per cent of the district cultivated area. The major crops of the Zaid are maize, Vegetables etc.