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Slum Development / Housing

Corporation conducts screening camps

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The Hindu 15.08.2009

Corporation conducts screening camps

Staff Reporter

CHENNAI: The Chennai Corporation on Thursday conducted screening camps in 30 slums in the city.

A total of 7,000 patients were screened and 550 cases with ordinary fever but without sore throat or cough were identified. At the Communicable Diseases Hospital in Tondiarpet around 1,000 patients were screened.

Corporation Health Officer P. Kuganandam said the initiative was being held to identify suspected swine flu cases using World Health Organisation criteria of high fever, running nose, sneezing, coughing and sore throat for more than three days. In all these cases, only one person was suspected of having swine flu and his blood sample has been sent for testing. The camps were conducted in Ezhil Nagar, K. K. Nagar, Ayodhya Kuppam, Saidapet and Periyar Nagar.

The civic body’s Health department had planned to conduct such camps in other places too.

Meanwhile, Mayor M. Subramanian said if parents of children studying in Corporation schools did not want their wards to participate in the Independence Day march past, they need not participate.

“We will not be punishing the child or impose fine for her/his absence.”

However, he said there was nothing to be afraid of about participating in the march past.

Last Updated on Saturday, 15 August 2009 05:05
 

Affordable housing for the middle class is imperative, says Mint Homes Chairman

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The Hindu 11.08.2009

Affordable housing for the middle class is imperative, says Mint Homes Chairman



Raj Natarajan

It is the middleclass which is the backbone of the Indian economy. And affordable housing for the middle class is a must. The government can do quite a lot in promoting this sector, observes Raj Natarajan, Chairman of Mint Homes.

Born at Kallidaikurichi in Tirunvelveli district, he had his schooling at Nagercoil, obtained Bachelor’s degree in chemical engineering from AC College of Technology, Chennai, and completed MS in chemical engineering and also MBA in the US. Then he turned an NRI.

Starting as a Chemical Process Engineer in a company in the US, he entered real estate sector in 1979 as a Property Manager, built a brokerage to a national-level organisation, and started focussing on land development and construction since 1993. Mr. Rajan, 61, is now heading a company which has invested Rs. 350 crore in construction projects in various parts of the world. The company has offices in the US, India, Croatia, Slovenia and Hungary and is in the process of setting up offices in China, New Zealand and also Hong Kong.

He has a project in Coimbatore also.

In a chat with G. Satyamurty, he pinpoints the lacunae in Indian construction scenario and offers suggestions to ameliorate the situation. He also urges the NRIs to return to India.

Undaunted by the global economic downturn, he says a “paradigm shift” is taking place. The economic importance is shifting away from the US and the Europe to countries like India, China and Brazil.

When the US and the Europe are expected to grow by 2 to 3 per cent, India and China are expecting 7 to 10 per cent growth.

“Of course, this is mainly because the population in India and China had never had economic prosperity. Now China is competing in the manufacturing area while India is able to compete in the technology sector. When these two countries are competing and are able to use their human resource and provide value to the global scenario, the standard of living goes up. They provide opportunities for the people to utilise their skills and earn income.”

Striking an autobiographical tone, he says when he became a Chemical Engineer in 1970, he did not have much of an opportunity in India. Now India has a large number of engineers. “The difference at present is that we are able to utilise them.”

Adverting to the construction scenario, he says the US has sufficient number of houses for its population. If its population were to grow between 1.5 and 3 per cent (including immigrant population), it has to fulfil only so much.

But, in China and India “we have fulfilled only 20 to 30 per cent of the housing needs. Only new constructions could fulfil the needs of the rest.”

He laments that whatever is being built in India is for the persons from abroad and the affluent.

“We do not build for the middle class people. We should build for the middle class India. That could be achieved only with the substantial government commitment.”

For instance, Tamil Nadu Government is sitting on a huge land bank. If those properties are to be made available to the private sector, the price of houses could considerably dip.

Backbone

Even with regard to the housing for the lower income groups and the economically weaker sections, the government has not been efficient. Unfortunately there is no programme for the middle class. “They are the backbone of the country. Real economic prosperity comes, not from the upper or the lower classes, but only from the middles class.”

Referring to various construction laws in India, Mr. Natarajan observes they are all “well conceived but poorly implemented.”

The government should first of all provide infrastructure before initiating housing. It does not have a definite programme to build the infrastructure from the fees it collects. Sometimes, the infrastructure is never built. The government should take responsibility for ensuring infrastructure in an orderly fashion. Planning and building sufficient infrastructure alone will support growth.

“I was in China in 1979. Then they were lagging behind India by 15 years. Now it is the reverse. India is lagging behind China by 15 years . It is because China is far developed in terms of infrastructure like road, water, electricity and gas.”

Mr. Natarajan asserts that India should take care of two issues if it were to grow further. “Unless we are able to address infrastructure and corruption properly, we will never become a global power.”

He wants the NRIs to come back home, bring back their systems and use them for the benefit of Indian society. “We owe this to our motherland.”

Last Updated on Tuesday, 11 August 2009 03:07
 

Funds given to housing project beneficiaries in city

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The Hindu 16.07.2009

Funds given to housing project beneficiaries in city

Special Correspondent

Land provided by Government to construct houses

 


If people need more money to build the houses, they can approach banks for loans



FOR THEIR UPLIFT: Coimbatore Corporation South Zone Chairman P. Pynthamil handing over sanction letters to beneficiaries of the Basic Services for Urban Poor housing project at Highways Colony in the city on Wednesday.

COIMBATORE: More than 10 families of Highways Colony off Tiruchi Road in the city were on Wednesday given Rs.1.12 lakh as Government grant to construct houses on lands provided to them by the Government, according to Coimbatore Corporation South Zone Chairman P. Pynthamil Pari.

The colony comes under Ward 25 of the Corporation. Mr. Pynthamil is the ward’s councillor.

234 families

The Government had approved the cases of 234 families for the grant of pattas to them, meeting a decades-old demand of these people, he said.

The total area was Rs.2.61 acres, costing around Rs.36 crore. Of these, 136 pattas were distributed last year and each family got a house site worth Rs.25 lakh to Rs.35 lakh.

The Government granted only non-transferable pattas so that the beneficiaries could not sell the sites, Mr. Pynthamil said. By granting the pattas, the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam had fulfilled the promise it made to these people during the 2006 Assembly elections, he said.

Of these 136 families, 94 had been identified as poor families that could not build houses.

Scheme

They had been brought under the Basic Services for Urban Poor scheme. Mr. Pynthamil handed over cheques for the grant to 11 of them. “The aim is to complete the houses in six months. If the people want to build houses that cost more than Rs.1.12 lakh, they can take loans from banks. Getting the loans may not be a problem as thecost of the land is high enough to serve as a viable security,” he said.

Last Updated on Thursday, 16 July 2009 06:31
 


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