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Towns and Cities

Planning for smart cities? Here’s the India readiness guide

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The Hindu      11.02.2016 

Planning for smart cities? Here’s the India readiness guide

(From left) Philip Bane, executive director of the Smart Cities Council in Washington, Lee Zak, Director, US Trade And Development Agency, Bruce Andrews, Deputy Secretary, US Department Of Commerce, Pratap Padode, founder-director, Smart Cities Council India, and Sumit Banerjee, Chairman, ASAPP Info Global, at the launch of the Indian readiness guide in Mumbai on Wednesday.
(From left) Philip Bane, executive director of the Smart Cities Council in Washington, Lee Zak, Director, US Trade And Development Agency, Bruce Andrews, Deputy Secretary, US Department Of Commerce, Pratap Padode, founder-director, Smart Cities Council India, and Sumit Banerjee, Chairman, ASAPP Info Global, at the launch of the Indian readiness guide in Mumbai on Wednesday.

Setting the platform for collaboration between local government and technology providers, the Smart Cities Council India on Wednesday launched the Indian readiness guide to help urban planners understand the framework of a smart city and take steps to improve infrastructure.

The India readiness guide was launched at the third smart cities summit on Wednesday and saw participation from over 70 expert speakers, officials from over 50 cities, and 300 delegates including technology experts, academics and urban planners.

Describing it as a significant first step by India to put its mark on the global smart cities stage, Pratap Padode, founder of the Smart Cities Council India, said the country could now become an ‘incubation lab’ for urban solutions.

“The Smart Cities Council has launched this to help cities plan their blueprint better. It is also offering workshops for municipalities seeking training and capacity building,” he added.

As much as it was an exercise in urban planning the summit was also a pitch for business. Among the keynote speakers at the event was US Deputy Secretary of Commerce Bruce Andrews, who was leading a delegation of 18 American companies looking to launch or expand trade in India in areas ranging from intelligent transportation, water management and power.

Mr Andrews stressed that there was substantial opportunities for these companies in India’s smart city projects and said the US was looking to be valuable partner in transferring the lessons it has learned in creating environmentally sustainable technology. He noted that there were billion of dollars waiting to be invested to deploy climate-friendly solutions but that “attracting this money is a competition”.

It was up to the government, he said, to make the Indian market the most attractive investment destination it can be. The US is currently engaged in supporting development Vizag, Allahabad and Ajmer as smart cities but Mr Andrews indicated that it was looking to be involved with all the other projects as well.

As part of the US delegation that met with Urban Development Minister Venkaiah Naidu on Tuesday, Philip Bane, executive director of the Smart Cities Council in Washington, said the Ministry wanted to let Indian cities grow without regulation. What it meant though, he added, was that while the Central government would allow cities freedom in developing plans for improvement it would not necessarily fund them.

“The challenge is to create Special Purpose Vehicles (SPVs) that will be adaptable and profitable and that is why we have formed the Smart Cities Council to come up with a blue print for that,” Mr Bane said.

The Indian Readiness Guide, Mr Bane added, featured 80 case studies, of which 40 are success stories from India in terms of improving urban infrastructure. The 400 page report cites studies from from Pune, Delhi, Kolkata, Surat, Jabalpur, Hyderabad, Indore etc.

The initial chapters focus on introductory, universal aspects, identifying various key responsibilities – the day-to-day services that cities need to provide. A dedicated chapter deals with citizen partnership and engagement and there are then individual chapters about each responsibility, such as water, transportation, public safety, etc. which are illustrated by supporting case studies.

Chapters on the Smart Cities Framework then elaborate on the relationship between a city’s responsibilities and its enablers – technology solutions that can make those tasks easier and citizen engagement that can make those implementations more inclusive.

The guide features 80 case studies, of which 40 are success stories in improving urban infrastructure

 

Corpn. service centres for 13 divisions

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The Hindu         29.01.2015   

Corpn. service centres for 13 divisions

Basic services from the Kochi Corporation can soon be accessed through regional stations to be set up in select divisions of the local body.

Christened Seva Gram, the units will come up in 13 divisions of the Kochi Corporation in the first phase shortly. The public can avail of the basic services, including application forms for various welfare pensions and birth and death certificates. Important announcements regarding the selection of beneficiaries for various welfare programmes too would be published at these centres, said Tony Chammany, Kochi Mayor.

It has been proposed that the units will function as the extension centres of the local body. With the units becoming operational, one need not come all the way to the main offices of the local body for obtaining the application forms and accessing the beneficiary lists and information released by the civic administration, Mr. Chammany said.

The units are conceived as the meeting points for ward sabhas, the grass root level forum for deciding on the development projects that are to be implemented in each locality.

The proposal was mooted by the Kerala Institute for Local Administration. The division councillors will be responsible for the functioning of the units, which shall remain open between 3 p.m. and 7 p.m. for at least five days a week.

The public can avail of the basic services, including application forms for various welfare pensions and birth and death certificates.

 

Renovated Town Hall will not be ready soon

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The Hindu        28.01.2015   

Renovated Town Hall will not be ready soon

It has been closed for the past four months

Work on the renovation of the Town Hall in Mangaluru isgoing slow. —Photo: H.S. Manjunath
Work on the renovation of the Town Hall in Mangaluru isgoing slow. —Photo: H.S. Manjunath

Usually a centre of social activities in the city, the Town Hall, closed for renovation for the past four months, will not be ready in the near future.

This came to light at the meeting of the Mangaluru City Corporation council on Tuesday. Neither Mayor Mahabala Marla nor Commissioner Hephsiba Rani Korlapati were ready to commit on when it would be ready.

The hall was expected to be ready in December-end for its golden jubilee celebration.

Leader of the Opposition in the council Premananda Shetty alleged that its renovation has been delayed due to a lack of coordination between B. Ramanath Rai, Minister in-charge of Dakshina Kannada, J.R. Lobo, MLA, Mangaluru City South, and the Mayor.

He claimed that as per information with him, the MLA was ensuring that the work would not completed till the term of Mr. Marla ended (in March) as the MLA had not been taken into confidence before entrusting the work to Nirmiti Kendra. As a result the work has come to a halt.

Mr. Marla said: “It will not be over during my tenure as Mayor.”

When the Commissioner, without elaborating, said that there were “some technical issues” which would take a fortnight for solving, both the ruling and the Opposition members objected to taking such a long time. Chairman of the Standing Committee for Town Planning and Improvement D.K. Ashok Kumar also opposed it. But the Commissioner stuck to her reply.

The Mayor said that Nirmiti Kendra, which was entrusted the civil work to the tune of Rs. 1 crore, refused to take up the second stage works of interiors and acoustic works stating that it did not have technical experts to do it.

Mr. Marla wondered how then the agency has taken up other works costing up to Rs. 20 crore. After a debate over the issue, both the ruling and the Opposition members pressed that the kendra should not be entrusted with any more corporation work .

Finally the council decided to write to the government to de-recognise the agency for which the council could entrust works up to Rs. 1 crore without inviting bids and up to Rs. 2 crore with the permission of the government and without inviting bids.

 


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