The migrant worker's name and the logbook that wasn't kept
A building collapse without a labour logbook is not just a tragedy — it is a governance failure the state chose not to see. The pattern repeats because the paperwork is treated as optional.

When a building comes down in an Indian city, the first hours are a scramble of cranes, sirens and phone-cam footage. The next phase is bureaucratic, slower, and far more revealing. Indian Express reported on 26 June 2026 that contractors at the site in question failed to maintain a logbook of labourers, leaving authorities with no reliable count of how many people remain trapped in the rubble. The detail is technical and unglamorous. It is also the entire story.
The numbers that vanish when the paperwork is not kept
India's migrant construction workforce is the scaffolding on which the country's urban boom rests. Nationally, the sector employs tens of millions, the bulk of them informal, day-rated, frequently inter-state, and paid in cash. A muster roll — the basic site register listing name, age, address and employer — is the only document that can answer the question families ask within hours of a collapse: is my son in there? Indian Express's reporting indicates that contractors at this site did not maintain one. The result is the worst possible information environment for rescue, compensation and identification, produced not by the disaster but by years of regulatory neglect upstream of it.
The same thread of coverage carried a companion piece on 26 June arguing that states are dragging their feet in establishing a trauma system — the chain of pre-hospital care, triage and rehabilitation that decides whether a crushed limb becomes an amputation, whether a survivor leaves hospital able to work. Taken together, the two pieces describe the same problem from opposite ends. At one end, the state cannot count the dead because no one was asked to count the living. At the other, the state cannot save the injured because no one built the road between collapse and clinic.
The law exists. Enforcement does not.
India's Building and Other Construction Workers (Regulation of Employment and Conditions of Service) Act of 1996, and the wider framework of state-level welfare boards funded by a dedicated cess on construction, were designed precisely for the worker who is invisible on a muster roll. The Building Workers' Welfare Cess Act collects 1% of construction cost into a fund that, on paper, insures and retrains exactly this population. Twenty-six years on, the gap between the fund's existence and its reach at the bottom of a collapsed site is the scandal. The cess flows in; the muster roll does not. The worker remains a pair of hands; the state remains a collector.
The structural pattern: informality as a deliberate choice, not an oversight
The plausible alternative read is that this is administrative sloppiness, a one-off lapse that will be punished by inspectors and forgotten by the next news cycle. The structural read is more uncomfortable. Construction in India is informal by design, because informal labour is cheaper to deploy, easier to dismiss, and impossible to organise when the muster roll is missing. A site that does not record who is on it is a site that cannot be held to account for who was killed on it. The absence of a logbook is not an administrative failure; it is the architecture of a market that prefers its workforce unlisted.
This is also why a national trauma-care system moves slowly. A counted worker is a worker whose injury is a future compensation claim. An uncounted worker is a cost the developer does not price. Every delay in building the pre-hospital chain is, in the same logic, a small saving to the principal contractor. The Indian Express's twin coverage is therefore not two stories but one: a country that cannot count its construction workers at the moment of collapse, and cannot treat them in the hour after it.
Stakes: what the next collapse will look like
If the pattern holds, the next building to come down will produce the same scramble: cranes, sirens, phone-cam footage, and a press conference in which a minister promises an inquiry. Families will post photos on WhatsApp and wait. Contractors will deny knowledge of who was on site. The Building Workers' Welfare Cess will, in some sense, have been spent on something else. And the question — how many are still trapped? — will again be answered with a shrug, because the paperwork was never the priority.
There is a counter-argument worth taking seriously: that the regulatory framework is robust and the failures are local, prosecutable, and increasingly visible in the press. The states are, after all, beginning to discuss trauma systems at all. That is the optimistic line. The evidence Indian Express assembled on 26 June does not contradict it, but it does push it. Visibility is not enforcement. A discussion is not a system. And a muster roll that was never opened is not corrected by a press inquiry a week later. The honest reading is that India knows what a safe construction sector looks like — it has known since 1996 — and has chosen, in the arithmetic of its labour market, to under-build it. The rubble is what that choice looks like from the inside.
This piece threads together two Indian Express reports from 26 June 2026 — the site-without-a-logbook story and the broader piece on state-level delays in building a trauma system — alongside the established 1996 framework for construction-worker welfare. Where the original reporting does not specify the location or casualty count, this article does not supply one.