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Master Plan

CZA issues notices to zoos after they miss deadline to submit masterplans

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Indian Express 29.09.2009

CZA issues notices to zoos after they miss deadline to submit masterplans

The Central Zoo Authority (CZA) has issued notices to four zoos in the state after they failed to submit their master plans explaining future development projects.

Sources said all the zoos were asked to submit their plans till 2020, by March 31. But only two zoos — Indroda Park, Gandhinagar; and Kankaria Zoo, Ahmedabad — have submitted their plans.

Sakkarbaug zoo in Junagadh; Sarthana Zoo in Surat; Sayajibaug Zoo in Vadodara; and Rajkot Zoo are yet to submit their plans.

CZA Evaluation and Monitoring officer Brij Gupta said: “As most zoos in Gujarat have missed their deadlines, CZA has issued notices to them to submit their master plans as soon as possible. We have taken up this initiative to improve zoo administration and performance. The main aim is to enforce minimum standards and norms for the upkeep and healthcare of the animals so that the zoos can come up to a standard where they can complement and strengthen the national efforts in conservation of wild fauna.”

He added: “If the masterplan is not submitted on time, no funds will be allocated in the coming years.”

He said that some zoos, such as the Butterfly Park in Surat, which is being developed by the Surat Municipal Corporation, doesn’t have CZA permission.

Surat Municipal Commissioner S Aparna said: “We have submitted the master plan. During their visit, CZA officials said there is a need to revise it and add some more details about new enclosures such as the Butterfly Park and aquarium in the masterplan. The new masterplan has already being cleared by the Sarthana zZoo authorities and we will submit it soon.”

Sayajibaug Zoo Curator Dr C B Patel was unavailable for comments. Zoo officials, however, said the masterplan will be submitted soon.

Vadodara Deputy Commissioner A O Sharma said: “We will submit the master plan in next week.”

Junagadh Zoo Director V J Rana said: “We were asked to submit a masterplan, but we have restricted funds. Ours is a large zoo and submitting a masterplan is a huge task, for which we need extra manpower including consultants and experts.”

He added: “The entry fee is still Rs 2, which is not enough to develop it to the level of an international zoo. A lot needs to be put in before we can submit the masterplan. We might say what we want to do, but the non-availability of funds has restricted us to go ahead with our infrastructure development plans.”

Last Updated on Tuesday, 29 September 2009 10:15
 

Master plan needed for Thrikkakara: Minister

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The Hindu 29.09.2009

Master plan needed for Thrikkakara: Minister

Special Correspondent

’JNNURM funds not judiciously utilised’

KOCHI: Thrikkakara, Kochi city’s favourite residential suburb which is expected to be elevated to a municipality, may soon go the same way as other overcrowded suburbs elsewhere in the country if steps are not taken to vastly improve its infrastructure.

This fear was expressed by speakers at a seminar on ‘Thrikkakara—the New Kochi’ organised by the Mavelipuram Residents’ Association, one of the earliest residents’ association in Thrikkakara, at Kakkanad on Monday.

Seminar

The seminar aimed to highlight the problems of Thrikkakara where a real estate boom has been going on for years and alert the authorities to the possible choking of public utilities and infrastructure in the near future.

Union Minister of State for Agriculture K.V. Thomas, who opened the seminar, urged the authorities to draw up a master plan for Thrikkakara and nearby places in order to regulate construction and provide for roads and other infrastructure.

The masterplan was also necessary for the provision of waste disposal and pollution control, he pointed out.

He said that lack of planning was one of the major reasons for the non-implementation of Centrally-funded development projects in Kerala.

The Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission (JNNURM), which pumped large funds to the cities for improving urban infrastructure, had not taken off well in Kerala. Though JNNURM would foot half of the bill of approved projects in Kochi, the authorities have not been able to make use of it, he said.

K. Babu MLA, who presided, cautioned that if steps were not taken now, Thripunithura would go the way of Mattancherry, where drinking water, roads and drainage were all in a shambles.

K.P. Dahanapalan MP launched the campaign for ‘Accident-free Thrikkakara’ and M.M. Monayi MLA launched the ‘Clean Thrikkakara’ campaign. MRA president A.J. Verghese, secretary Anil Kumar spoke and film actor Karthika spoke.

The Union Minister honoured senior journalist N.N. Sathyavrathan by presenting him a shawl.

Last Updated on Tuesday, 29 September 2009 02:05
 

To market, to market to buy a big chaos

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Indian Express 9.09.2009

To market, to market to buy a big chaos

It's eight years since the Delhi High Court ordered that markets selling hazardous and bulky goods in the Walled City should be shifted to the city’s outskirts.

Delhi’s Masterplan for 2021, and every subsequent development plan, also stressed on the need to shift the wholesale markets out of Old Delhi.

But Delhi’s civic agencies have taken little action, if any.

The Walled City houses some of Asia’s largest wholesale markets, and even civic officials accept they are a major cause of congestion and traffic chaos in the already clogged-up area. To make it worse, traders and transporters use these roads as thoroughfares, leading to movement of heavy vehicles.

The High Court order to move out the chemical market came on September 14, 1997 — after a devastating fire that started from an unauthorised chemical store at Lal Kuan market on May 31, 1997, left 57 dead and 41 others injured. Ordering that all chemical traders should shift to the new Holambi-Kalan market in North Delhi, the court imposed the cost on the traders, with a direction that their shops in Old Delhi should be sealed till they make the payment.

On ground, nothing has changed. Like earlier, Old Delhi remains home to over a thousand traders. Like earlier, the chemical market at Lal Kuan, the steel and transport market at Hauz Kazi, foodgrain market at Naya Bazaar and the spice market at Tilak Bazaar continue, triggering chaos and clutter along the way.

What MCD Says
So what stops the Municipal Corporation of Delhi (MCD) from shifting these traders? MCD Deputy Commissioner (City Zone) Vijay Singh says there are multiple reasons. He says the Delhi Development Authority (DDA) has delayed providing alternative space and other required services, and also points at reluctance among the traders as well as leniency on part of the MCD

Following the High Court order, Singh says the MCD had conducted a survey to check the number of traders who needed to be provided with plots, and a list of over 500 eligible shopowners was forwarded to DDA, according to Singh. While substitute land was allotted at Bawana and Holambi Kalan, near Narela, the wholesale markets still operate from Old Delhi, mainly from Chandni Chowk.

Municipal officials claim the DDA delayed development of the proposed Integrated Freight Complexes (IFCs) at the site where the market is to be shifted.

Singh says some transport godowns have been shifted to Sanjay Gandhi Nagar, with plots allotted to owners, but the remaining godown owners are not too keen on shifting to the IFCs.

Transporters, he says, contend that they will stay put till the markets are shifted out completely. “Issues like plot size for shops are also not resolved yet for chemical traders,” he says.

The Naya Bazaar wholesale market for foodgrain on GB Road requires immediate attention, according to Singh. “Shifting this market alone will lead to de-congestion of Old Delhi to a large extent — there is a constant movement of heavy vehicles and trucks to ferry goods that leads to traffic chaos.”

To address the problem, Singh says the municipality has decided to let wholesale offices and retail showrooms stay but the godowns will be “shifted soon”.

Delhi’s Chief Fire Officer R C Sharma says: “No one knows how many different kinds of chemicals are stored here, let alone what might happen if a major fire breaks out in a storeroom. Besides residents, an estimated 20,000 people work in this small area — and it is impossible for a fire engine to enter here.

“The only way you can avert a disaster is to shift this market to an area where it can be properly regulated.”

What Traders Say
“We are functioning from Chandni Chowk since 1960,” Chemical Merchants’ Association president Sushil Goel says, “but not all were assigned plots in the draw of lots held in 2002 for shifting us to Holambi Kalan.” The plots in the allotted area are also “too small for our needs” and the rate is way over the top, he says. “No one has approached us to resolve these pending issues.”

Some traders also fear loss of business once they move out of Chandni Chowk since the infrastructure is poor, says Udhav Sharda, secretary of the Delhi Electrical Traders’ Association.

The MCD, meanwhile, has decided to take legal recourse against offenders: fresh notices have been sent to all transporters to get rid of unauthorised parking and restrict loading and off-loading of goods. The MCD has also sent notices to traders asking them to shift their godowns.

What DDA Says
DDA officials say the delay in shifting the markets was mainly due to a lengthy verification procedure to decide eligibility, cost and other issues. As per the High Court’s order, traders had to deposit Rs 20,000 against each allotment. Officials say it was verified at the time that only 521 dealers had deposited the requisite amount.

In September 2002, these 521 dealers were allotted sites of 50 square metres each.

In 2008, a draw of lots was held to allot sites to another 102 eligible traders, the officials say, but since many traders were unhappy with the amount to be deposited, it led to further delay.

In an email reply, to Newsline, the DDA says 623 allotments have been made till date, of which 355 traders have been issued possession letters. Call letters for issuing possession letters have been given to 43, and 51 cases were found with deficiencies in documents and papers, according to the email.

The DDA claims the MCD has been requested to check status of remaining unverified cases.

According to DDA officials, all peripheral services like sewage and stormwater drains have been laid at Holambi Kalan and water supply is also available. Internal supply lines, including internal sewerage, have also been laid, they say.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 09 September 2009 10:34
 


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