When a powerful storm tears through a constituency, downed power lines are not just an inconvenience. They are a safety hazard — particularly in area
When a powerful storm tears through a constituency, downed power lines are not just an inconvenience. They are a safety hazard — particularly in areas with dense housing, old electric poles, and overhead cables that were never built for the kind of wind speeds Rajasthan saw in early April 2026.
For residents of Jhotwara and surrounding areas, the recent Western Disturbance that brought heavy rain, hailstorms, and gusty winds across 20+ Rajasthan districts raised an urgent question: how quickly will electricity be restored, and will the infrastructure be stronger than before?
Jhotwara MLA Col. Rajyavardhan Rathore answered that with action, not just reassurance.
What the Storm Exposed — and What Rathore Ordered
The April storms in Rajasthan were not a one-off event. India Meteorological Department (IMD) recorded six consecutive Western Disturbances between mid-March and early April 2026 — an unusual pattern that caused repeated disruption. With another disturbance forecast from April 7, the pressure on local infrastructure has been relentless.
Col. Rathore had already seen this coming. In a detailed review meeting held on March 2, 2026, he chaired a coordination session involving the Municipal Corporation, Jaipur Development Authority (JDA), and NHAI specifically to pre-empt storm-season failures. His directive was clear: permanent solutions, not patch jobs.
His exact instruction to officials: “Roads repeatedly damaged due to poor drainage should only be reconstructed after ensuring a permanent drainage system is in place.” The same thinking applies to power — repair what broke, then build it stronger.
The Bigger Picture: ₹924 Crore of Infrastructure Going In
The storm damage does not exist in isolation. Since January 2024, Jhotwara has seen ₹924.32 crore of development work — roads, bridges, drainage, underpasses, water connections. This scale of construction creates a responsibility: existing infrastructure must be maintained and upgraded to match the new standard.
- ₹924 Cr Development works in Jhotwara since Jan 2024
- 20+ Rajasthan districts affected by April storm alerts
- 24 hrs Rathore’s “Within 24 Hrs WIP” standard for urgent repairs
The Jaipur Vidyut Vitran Nigam (JVVNL), which manages power distribution in the Jhotwara area, has been tasked with emergency repair and restoration. Col. Rathore’s office has maintained consistent pressure on utility coordination — the same inter-departmental approach used for roads and drainage is now being applied to power.
What Residents Can Expect — and Should Report
If you are a Jhotwara resident dealing with damaged poles, hanging wires, or extended outages after the storm, here is what you should know:
- Report damaged power infrastructure by calling JVVNL helpline 1912 — 24×7 for outage complaints
- Do not approach or touch downed power lines — report immediately and keep others away
- For development work status in your area, check Viksit Jhotwara’s live project tracker
- For escalations, Col. Rathore’s constituency office is the direct point of contact
The long-term shift: Jhotwara’s infrastructure upgrades are designed to reduce this kind of post-storm scramble. When drainage is permanent, roads hold. When electrical poles are modernised and lines are properly secured, storms cause less damage. This is what ₹924 crore of planned, coordinated development looks like in practice.
Storms are inevitable. Poor response is not. Follow Col. Rathore’s latest updates to track repair timelines and infrastructure progress in your area.

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