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Private schools asked to avail of regularisation scheme

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The Hindu              04.10.2013

Private schools asked to avail of regularisation scheme

The Directorate of Matriculation Schools has urged private schools across the State to avail of the property tax exemption and regularisation concessions offered by the State government for school buildings constructed prior to July 1, 2007.

Sources in the Directorate of Matriculation Schools told The Hindu that many schools in Tamil Nadu had been functioning without approval for their buildings from the local bodies. Now, the Department of School Education had made plan approval mandatory for schools in order to obtain or renew recognition of their institutions. Section 18 of the Right To Education Act prohibits schools from functioning without recognition.

Tamil Nadu Private Schools Association president R. Visalakshi, however, said that the cut-off year fixed as 2007 was unfair and the exemptions must be granted to school buildings constructed before June 2013.

“This exemption was being provided only to schools that had obtained approval from local bodies, which most of the schools had done by June 2013,” she said.

She said that as the schools had already paid infrastructure and amenities charges to local bodies while getting approval, they should be completely exempted from paying the Local Planning Authority fees. At present, the schools were given 50 per cent exemption.

Coimbatore had 82 matriculation high schools and 185 higher secondary schools with a total of 2.27 students (1.18 lakh boys and 1.09 lakh girls), an official said.

The exemptions will be accorded only if the buildings conformed to the Government Orders 234 and 235, which were issued last year and G.O. 43 issued in February this year.

The G. Os specify that the floor space index violations should not exceed 50 per cent of the maximum limit. Further, the applications for regularisation would be rejected if the extent of violations in respect of minimum required road width exceeds 20 per cent. The violations in minimum setback spaces in front, rear and side of the building should not exceed 50 per cent of the mandated norms.

The State government, in November 2012, issued guidelines under Section 113-C (a new clause brought in after an amendment) of the Tamil Nadu Town and Country Planning Act, 1971 for the exemption of unauthorised buildings from regulations.

 

More people go for rainwater harvesting

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The Hindu            01.10.2013

More people go for rainwater harvesting

Karthik Madhavan

The city has grown richer by 3,240 rainwater harvesting structures.

The structures have come up mostly at newly constructed houses or apartment complexes and commercial buildings.

The Coimbatore Corporation has made rainwater harvesting mandatory to get a water supply connection.

The corporation had said that water connections would be allotted once water supply situation improves.

Assistant engineers in Wards would ensure that the applicants had indeed constructed the structures and that the structures were capable of harvesting rain water.

The physical verification was to avoid applicants getting away by just submitting photographs but not constructing the structures.

Sources in the corporation said that 600 more applications for water supply connection were pending.

The corporation had conducted awareness campaigns across the city by taking out rallies, distributing handbills, and educating the residents on the need to construct such structures.

The corporation wants residents to repair defunct rainwater harvesting structures at the earliest.

Water from the Siruvani Dam continued to overflow for the 13th consecutive day.

The corporation was drawing 97.25 million litres a day.

 

Rs.97-lakh project to harvest rainwater

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The Hindu               23.08.2013 

Rs.97-lakh project to harvest rainwater

The project will be executed using Rural Infrastructure Development Fund of National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development (NABARD) for the year 2012-13.— Photo: C.Venkatachalapathy
The project will be executed using Rural Infrastructure Development Fund of National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development (NABARD) for the year 2012-13.— Photo: C.Venkatachalapathy

Rainwater harvesting is the answer to the drought situation faced by Vellore district. Silted and encroached rivers, tanks, supply channels, lakes and ponds constitute the biggest hurdle to natural rainwater harvesting.

Under these circumstances, the Sholinghur town panchayat has undertaken the task of improving the sprawling 25,600-square metre Appankarakulam tank at a cost of Rs. 97 lakh and developing it as a major rainwater harvesting structure and recreation centre for the public, children and walkers. This will be executed using Rural Infrastructure Development Fund (RIDF) of National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development (NABARD) for the year 2012-13.

A visit of presspersons to the tank, arranged by the Vellore Collector on Thursday revealed that the tank has been desilted, a baby pond formed at the centre of the tank to retain some water during drought, and earthen bunds formed on the sides of the tank with silt obtained form desilting. Other works such as deepening of the tank, construction of granite retaining walls in the inside of the tank, laying of granite beds on the retaining walls, and cementing the surface, construction of concrete retaining walls on the south-eastern portion of the tank, and construction of cement concrete slab culvert for the outlet channel have been completed.

The town panchayat is yet to begin the work of constructing concrete pillars and erecting barbed wire fencing around the tank, which has been wrongly mentioned as a completed work in the board giving details of the project, displayed at the entrance to the tank.

Works to be undertaken under the self-sufficiency scheme for 2013-14 include grass surfacing of outer bunds and planting of tree saplings at a cost of Rs. 15 lakh and formation of a children’s park on the eastern side of the tank (Rs. 12 lakh). Additional works to be taken up include formation of a walking pathway around the tank by laying ornamental cement concrete stones on the bunds (Rs. 20 lakh), digging deep borewell, formation of artificial fountain and construction of security room (Rs.10 lakh) and erection of ornamental solar lamps around the tank (Rs. 5 lakh).

The Collector said that the main objective of the project is to increase groundwater table in the area around the tank by storing rainwater and protecting water bodies. Other objectives include the formation of walking pathway, children’s park and recreation centre. Four tanks in Vellore district, including the Appankarakulam tank, are to be upgraded at a total cost of Rs. 2.2 crore. The other three tanks to be upgraded are the Thirukkulam tank in Sholinghur (Rs. 30 lakh), Nallathanneer Kulam in Thimiri town panchayat (Rs. 43 lakh) and Perumal Kulam in Kalavai town panchayat (Rs. 50 lakh). The work on Perumal Kulam has been completed.

 


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