The Indian Express 06.08.2013
BMC had to fill over 3,500 craters again
problem of potholes, work on more than one-fifth of the craters it had
filled had to be redone.
According to BMC’s pothole tracking software, over 3,532 craters
had to be refilled as the work carried out on them was sub-standard. The
civic administration has filled 16,782 of the 19,302 potholes reported
since June. It sets aside Rs 58 crore for pothole filling work each
monsoon.
“Each time a pothole resurfaces, officials have to put it on the
re-open or re-assign list. The engineer can direct a contractor to
re-open a pothole if he finds that the quality of mix used to repair it
is sub-standard, rain has washed away the filling, or if the work is
poorly executed,” said a senior civic official.
Samajwadi Party corporator and BMC Standing Committee member
Raees Shaikh said, “Although on paper, the officials are supposed to
conduct routine supervision and audits of the material used, on the
ground, none of the mandates is followed. Truckloads of cold mix is just
dumped on potholes without any quality check”.
A Marshall Stability test to check the bitumen content, density
of the mix, and the load that the specimen can take under a specified
temperature, revealed that over 20 per cent of the cold mix used to
repair potholes failed to meet the specific requirements, indicating
malpractice and misappropriation of funds by contractors.
Swiss project management consultant, SGS, cited absence of a
supervisory panel, lack of proper machinery and absence of proper
laboratory testing of raw material in its audit report submitted to BMC
last year.
MNS corporators protest against potholes
A section of Maharashtra Navnirman Sena (MNS) corporators
attended the BMC general body meeting Monday wearing neck braces and hip
belts to demonstrate the plight of commuters prone to injury on
pothole-ridden roads. They raised the issue of potholes and demanded a
response from Municipal Commissioner Sitaram Kunte. “I do not have any
specific answers at present. We will present a detailed plan of action
in the next meeting,” said Kunte.
MNS corporators have been in the news in the last two weeks for their
violent protests against BMC with regard to potholes. While corporator
Sandeep Deshpande held captive three sub-engineers in their office on
July 22, MNS leader Dilip Lande and others assaulted a municipal road
contractor on July 26. Corporator Girish Dhanurkar reportedly beat up a
junior engineer on August 1.
“We have staged three protests so far against the city’s
potholes. People are facing inconvenience, suffering injuries everyday.
We want an answer from the Commissioner.”said MNS leader Dilip Lande.