The Hindu 28.04.2017
BBMP scrambling to get drains ready before monsoon
Debris is yet to be cleared from this rajakaluve in Rajarajeshwari
Nagar from which encroachments were removed.K. Murali
KumarK_MURALI_KUMAR
Though encroachments have been removed from nearly 22 km ofstorm-water drains, not much has been done to strengthen the network
After the controversy around demolishing structures built on
encroached storm-water drains (SWDs), the BBMP has a lot of catching up
to do when it comes to reconstructing the drain network
Although
monsoon is just a month away, the Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike
(BBMP) seems to be under-prepared to handle rains. After several areas
were inundated last monsoon owing to choked drains, the BBMP had
demolished several structures and recovered nearly 22 km of SWDs.
However,
the civic agency has just completed concretising 1.8 km of the drain
network. Worse, BBMP has not maintained records of the extent of drains
recovered in the first phase of encroachment removal from January to
July 2016.
The BBMP had identified 1,953 encroachments of which
1,225 were removed in three phases starting January 2016. A 22-km
stretch, spreading across 11 acres and 21 guntas, was recovered in the
second and third phase of the drive, said BBMP officials. “A 1.8 km
stretch of RCC drain in Bommanahalli has been reconstructed,” said BBMP
chief engineer (SWD) Siddegowda. “Work is in progress in Dasarahalli,
Kasavanahalli, Byatarayanapura, and Yelahanka, and is expected to be
completed in three-and-a-half months,” he added.
He
said work was held up due to a delay in sanctioning of funds. “Now that
funds have been sanctioned and work orders given, we are hoping to
finish the cementing of drains by the end of the year,” he added.
However,
the date of completion of the project is April 2018. “Work on
vulnerable parts of the drain network will be completed in two months,”
Mr. Siddegowda said. In Kodichikkanahalli, which faced the brunt of
flooding last year, the drain has been left open near the opening to the
lake. As a result, waste is being dumped into the drain, which ends up
in the lake. “The place has become a littering spot, and there is a lot
of stench and mosquitoes,” said Meena Balu, a resident.
Another complaint is the slow pace of work.
“Work
on a SWD next to a mall in Malleswaram has been going on for several
months now. Every once in a while, work is re-started and the drain is
left open only to be closed a few days later,” said a resident of
Malleswaram.