Badhawar village in Haryana's Hisar district is still underwater three months after floods hit the region. Only a small top part of a one-foot-wide school boundary wall is visible above water, surrounded by invasive green hyacinth. Around 150 families now walk on this narrow wall to go out since streets remain flooded. Temporary walkways made of wooden planks on diesel barrels connect homes to the wall. Meenakshi, a resident, said her family returned just two weeks ago after staying in Barwala town for more than two months. She said, "Even after three months, the administration has failed to provide us safe connectivity. All of us, even the children, walk on this wall multiple times through the day for routine and chores." Children carry school bags on this risky path, and women fetch water balancing on it. More than 5.29 lakh farmers from 6,395 villages in Haryana have reported crop losses on over 31 lakh acres via the government's Kshatipurti portal. Hisar is among the worst hit with 78,000 farmers from 276 villages reporting losses on 4.71 lakh acres. Many fields remain waterlogged. Mahender Singh, a farmer, said his family lost the entire kharif crop and fears the rabi crop too will suffer without quick sowing. Villagers complain of no government help or timely compensation. The sarpanch allegedly lacks resources. Sunil, representing the sarpanch, said a drainage channel was dug but bureaucratic delays remain. The irrigation department blamed local politics and farmer opposition for slow water drainage. The village primary school is damaged and classes shifted temporarily. Head Seema said students are only allowed in with teachers due to flooding. Repair work has yet to start despite requests. Chief Minister Nayab Saini recently visited a nearby village but made no flood relief announcements. However, he declared compensation up to ₹15,000 per acre and deferment of crop loans and electricity bills. Farmers say surveys and compensation have not yet reached them. Vikas, a farmer of 10 acres, claimed no communication about compensation months after the flood. Dalit Basti residents face ruined homes, lack of work, and poor sanitation. Many await survey and aid while living in unsafe houses with cracks. Local activists accuse the administration of negligence and political bias, though they praise efforts to restore electricity. Repeated attempts to contact officials for comment went unanswered. The village and its farmers continue to battle the flood's long shadow with limited help and mounting losses.