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General Administration

You can easily get water connections

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The Times of India              27.05.2013 

You can easily get water connections

BANGALORE: Residents can now apply for new water and sanitary connections at the sub-divisional office of BWSSB or through licensed plumbers.

Following an amendment to BWSSB regulation12 on Saturday, a resident can now directly submit his application along with a copy of the sanctioned plan of the building, tax receipt or extract of the khata certificate at the jurisdictional sub-divisional office of BWSSB. After an inspection of the property by the water inspector or engineer concerned, the assistant executive engineer will issue a demand note to the applicant.

After the payment of the prescribed charges, the connection will be sanctioned and a meter will be issued to the respective water inspector. BWSSB said applicants should approach licensed plumbers only; the list is available on the Board's website. However, installation of water meters and borewell systems can be carried out under the supervision of a water inspector only, said an official statement from the utility.

Earlier, applicants had to rely on plumbers to get new water and sanitary connections.

 

BWSSB eases water connection process

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The Times of India              27.05.2013 

BWSSB eases water connection process

BANGALORE: You can now directly apply for your water and sanitary connection to the sib-divisional office of BWSSB or through licensed plumber if you are building a new house in the city. This came as the amendment of the BWSSB regulation 12, on May 25.

The applicant can directly submit the application along with the copy of the sanctioned plan of the building, tax receipt or abstract of the khata certificate to the sub-divisional officials of BWSSB under the jurisdiction of whom, the house is coming up. The process endures the assistant executive engineer to issue demand note to the owner of the after the inspection of the property by the respective water inspector or engineer.

Connection will be sanctioned and meter will be issued to the respective water inspector, after payment of the above. BWSSB and the amendment also suggest that applicants make use of service from licensed plumbers only. The list of licensed plumber is available of the web site of the water board. However, installation of water meter and bore well system shall be carried out under the supervision of the water inspector only, said the official statement from the utility. 

 

Garbage dumping in Nag River continues; Nagpur Municipal Corporation fines 100 violators

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The Times of India              27.05.2013

Garbage dumping in Nag River continues; Nagpur Municipal Corporation fines 100 violators

NAGPUR: After a 15-day-long drive (from May 1 to May 15) to clean Nag River, the Nagpur Municipal Corporation is facing hardships to keep it free of garbage. For, many Nagpurians, including shopkeepers and petty vendors, continue to dump all kind of waste in the river.

The situation seemed to be under control during the campaign. However, recent observations are not encouraging for plans to rejuvenate the iconic river. Shopkeepers continue to dump waste on the river's banks. And this has been going on for last several years, said NMC health officials. "Despite such a massive drive, the NMC is not getting much support from Nagpurians. Even warnings to violators have not helped," said NMC health officer (sanitation) Dr Ashok Urkude.

Several residential areas along the 17-km route of the river are again being littered with waste. NMC has identified some spots near Panchsheel Square, Dhantoli police station, alongside Great Nag Road and Nandanvan.

NMC health department had also launched a drive to punish violators on May 6. So far, 100 persons have been fined and Rs80,700 recovered.

Kaustav Chatterjee, co-founder of a city based NGO Green Vigil Foundation, wondered how citizens can do this. "Our NGO was actively involved in 'Save Nag River' campaign conducted by NMC. Our members went door-to-door to educate citizens about the need to rejuvenate Nag River," he said.

The dumping in the river points towards the larger issue of garbage collection and waste management. Chatterjee said, "We must realize that such campaign needs to be conducted through the year and the NMC must ensure proper garbage collection. Many citizens complain that garbage collection vans don't visit their locality regularly. We have also found that several gutter lines are choked. Such issues have been resolved in the past after arranging meetings with NMC officials, public representatives and citizens. I feel the need of the hour is public awareness, continuous supervision and strict implementation of laws along with levy of penalty on violators. Otherwise, it will be very difficult to save our signature River," he said.

Dr Urkude has appealed citizens to cooperate with the civic body in keeping the river clean.

 


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