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LMC cancels lease of housing society

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The Times of India                  07.06.2013

LMC cancels lease of housing society

LUCKNOW: The state government has cancelled the lease of over four Bigha (10,000 sq mt) of land allotted to one Mansarovar Sahkari Awas Samiti to Jiyamau in 1995 on charges of violation of norms and agreement. The society is believed to be owned by the kin of a senior bureaucrat in former BSP regime.

The land, near Lohiya Path, was leased out to the samiti by the Lucknow Municipal Corporation with a condition that it would allot plots to people on a no-profit-no-loss basis. The samiti was also asked to ensure that plots were given to people from the lower section of the society.

According to the state government, the samiti was supposed to develop the land as per the layout plan drafted by the Lucknow Development Authority (LDA). The layout was endorsed by the LMC. However, the society neither developed the land nor allotted to people even after a gap of five years.

Subsequently, in 2,000, the LMC demanded an explanation from the society, which, however, did not gave any reply. The society, then, approached the high court saying that the LMC did not handed over the possession of the land. In 2012, the court asked the LMC to provide possession of the land to the society. The society, in turn, was asked to give the lay out plan within 10 days.

The LMC did provide possession of the land to the society. But the latter did not gave satisfactory reply to the LMC about the layout plan and allotment of the plot.

A notice was served on the society in 2012. But that did not deter the society to abide by the norms. It neither gave a satisfactory reply to the LMC nor provided requisite information about the case. 

 

Birth certificates of new-borns via courier soon

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The Times of India                  07.06.2013

Birth certificates of new-borns via courier soon

HYDERABAD: Henceforth, parents will get birth certificates of their new-borns at their doorstep by courier and that too free of cost. The Greater Hyderabad Municipal Corporation (GHMC) has decided to launch the facility to prevent parents from doing rounds of circle offices.

GHMC mayor Mohammed Majid Hussain on Thursday said the new system will be launched on June 10. According to him, digital birth certificates would be sent to the residence of new-borns through courier free-of-cost. As people in the twin cities were facing lot of inconvenience in obtaining birth certificates from circle/ward offices, it was decided to launch the facility, he said in an official release.

GHMC commissioner M T Krishna Babu said it would the first of its kind facility in the country. Regarding death certificates, he said procedures were being streamlining for issuing death certificates after thorough verification. "We will also send death certificates to the family members through courier free-of-cost. A condolence message will also be sent to the family members along with the certificate," he said in the release.

 

BMC adds 33 weather stations for area-specific flood control

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The Times of India                  07.06.2013

BMC adds 33 weather stations for area-specific flood control

MUMBAI: This monsoon, Mumbaikars will be able to know how much it rained in their locality every 15 minutes: the BMC has increased its automatic weather stations to 60 from 27.

The weather stations have been added to measure rainfall variation with accuracy in a more representative way. "Till last year, we had one automatic weather station for every 10 sq km. Now it is one for every 4 sq km," said Mahesh Narvekar, head of the BMC's disaster management cell. The weather stations have been added in conformance with flood preparedness guidelines of the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA), drawn up considering rapidly changing rain patterns.

"Most of the new weather stations have been installed at fire stations and ward offices," Narvekar said. Each has a tipping bucket rain gauge system comprising a funnel that collects rain water and channels it into a small seesaw-like container . "This is how rainfall is measured: A drop of rain makes 0.25 mm of the gauge container. Thus, two drops on each side of the container (totalling four drops) make 1 mm of rainfall," Narvekar said.

The data is sent to a console through an electric signal. "An IP address is given to each console , which sends the measurements to the data centre," he said. "The data is collated and put on the BMC's monsoon website, where rainfall data is updated every 15 minutes. The website will go live when the rainy season starts and will remain so for the four-month duration of the monsoon."

Though the BMC's automatic weather stations are active throughout the year, the civic body collects information provided by them only during the monsoon months. "Our weather stations record temperature , wind direction and atmospheric pressure every day for all twelve months. But we do not collect and analyze this data as we are interested only in rainfall measurements ," Narvekar said.

The Met department, too, is getting 30 additional weather stations. At present, the department has only two weather stations in the citythe ones in Colaba and Santa Cruz. "We have got approval from the government to initialize the Megacity forecast system in Mumbai," said K S Hosalikar, scientist, IMD. "The Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology will help us set up new weather stations in the city in 2013-14 ."

Observation points


From this year onwards, the BMC will get rainfall data from 60 weather stations, two of which are yet to be installed. The rest are functional

New 31

Colaba, Malwani, Mandavi, Nariman Point, Rawali Camp & Vile Parle (Wireless) fire stations; ward offices in B, C, D, F-North , F-South , G-South , H-West , K-East , K-West , L, M-West , N, S and W-South wards; Malbar Hill; Tulsi lake; Bhagawati, KEM, Kurla Bhabha, Nair and Grant Road Eye hospitals; engineering hub in Worli; Sion-Panvel octroi naka, SWD workshop in Dadar; Bhandup

Old 27


Andheri, Bandra, Borivli, Byculla, Chembur, Chincholi, Dadar, Dahisar, Dharavi, Dindoshi, Gawanpada, Kandivali, Kurla, Marol, Memonwada, Mulund, Vikhroli, Vile Parle (Wired), Wadala, Worli and BKC fire stations; BMC HQ building 1; BMC HQ building 2; Colaba IMD observatory, Deonar, Goregaon, Malad

Automatic rain gauges


At its weather stations, the BMC has installed tipping bucket rain gauges. Each consists of a funnel that channels water into a small seesaw-like container

After a set amount of water collects, the seesaw tips, dumping the water and sending an electric signal

The data is sent to a console, from where it reaches a data centre and finally to the BMC's control room, which updates the information every 15 minutes on its monsoon website

The website will be activated once the rainy season starts. 

 


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