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General Administration

Directives on mobile towers

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The Hindu                              19.02.2013

Directives on mobile towers

Staff Reporter 

In the backdrop of studies indicating a possible health hazard on account of the exposure to electromagnetic radiations from mobile phone towers, the Directorate of Municipal Administration has instructed deputy commissioners to ensure that the guidelines stipulated by the Department of Telecommunication are strictly followed.

In a press release here, the Commissioner, Directorate of Municipal Administration, said mobile towers should not be installed on the premises of schools, colleges and hospitals. Prior permission should be obtained from local bodies, planning authorities, government departments, and the Pollution Control Board before installation.

Telecom companies should adhere to the maximum permitted radiation levels fixed by the government and install the towers at a suitable distance away from the buildings and also at a considerable height from the ceiling of the nearby buildings. The permission of land owners is mandatory too.

Deputy commissioners have been told to ensure that the guidelines are followed and if there are any violations, they should ensure that the towers are shifted.

Last Updated on Tuesday, 19 February 2013 09:35
 

'Politically backed contractors often allow illegal trench work'

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The Times of India                      15.02.2013

'Politically backed contractors often allow illegal trench work'

MUMBAI: Politically backed contractors and their arm-twisting tactics are allegedly the main reason behind trenched roads lying unrepaired and ducts being installed illegally, which have become the bane of motorists as well as pedestrians in the city.

Politically backed contractors and their arm-twisting tactics allegedly behind the illegal duct laying and unfilled trenches along the roads inconveniencing the traffic and pedestrians in a big way.

"Even after utility companies pay trenching fees to the BMC for underground work and relaying of roads, the contractors appointed for the reinstatement job often default on their work. Only prompt and proper monitoring of the site can stop the shoddy attitude of contractors and roads can be repaired faster. Moreover, if the contractors are monitored, they will not be able to allow other firms to work in the same pit without taking permissions and paying fees," said a source in the supply industry.

The BMC has got FIRs registered against five utility firms for unauthorized digging and laying of cables on Ghatkopar-Makhurd Link Road. The civic body found that Tulip Telecom, Reliance Communication and Tata Tele Services installed ducts illegally in a trench for which Tata Power Company and Mahangar Gas Ltd had taken permission from the BMC's M-East ward office. Each company has reportedly caused the BMC a loss of around Rs 2.97 crore. MGL spokesperson, however, said it had followed the BMC guidelines while laying gas pipelines. "We fully cooperated with the authorities and informed them once we finished installing the pipelines, as is the rule. At no point do we work beyond the jurisdiction," the spokesperson said. Tata Power declined to comment. over the BMC action.

BMC officials said CWC system had been scrapped and engineers were monitoring reinstatement promptly.

On Wednesday the BMC lodged FIR against five utilities for unauthorized digging on Ghatkopar-Mankhurd link road and causing BMC a loss of approximately Rs 2.97 crore each. .

Going by the norms, after a utility firm applies for underground work, a BMC engineer, along with his counterparts from the applicant firm as well as the civil works contractor's company, inspect the site to confirm the details in the application. "As contractors would so far reinstate trenches, the BMC would charge the utility firm for the job. The payment had to be made to obtain permission for the excavation and subsequent work," said a source, adding the ward engineer concerned would also issue work order to the contractor for the relaying of the stretch. Proper backfilling of trench has to be done simultaneously by Ward CWC.

"Within seven days of a utility firm finishing its work, the contractor is supposed to complete his job. A BMC engineer has to be vigilant till the completion of the reinstatement or the contractors may allow improper use of trenches already dug," said a source.

Last Updated on Friday, 15 February 2013 11:22
 

BMC wants firms to lay cables by boring holes, not digging roads

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The Times of India       15.02.2013

BMC wants firms to lay cables by boring holes, not digging roads

MUMBAI: The BMC, which has registered an FIR against five utility companies for allegedly illegal digging on Ghatkopar-Mankhurd Link Road, has refused to change its decision of not granting them trenching permission until they compensate for the losses caused by the unauthorized laying of cable ducts on the stretch. Moreover, the civic body has decided to set another condition before allowing any utility firm to dig roads in the city.

In a bid to check the gradual deterioration in the condition of roads that are dug open, the BMC now insists that the companies adopt a new technology, the Horizontal Drilling Technology (HDT), which will apparently cause less harm to the surface. With this technology, the entire road does not have to be dug up; instead, a firm can drill bores on the surface and pass ducts through them. "While granting permission for large-scale digging, we are thinking of asking the firms to use HDT. We are in talks with utility companies. Open-surface digging causes a lot of physical stress to a road, which is not even reinstated properly, and that reduces its life span," said a senior civic official.

Utility firms are, however, resisting the move because they feel that the proposed process will push up the cost manifold; according to a source, whether the firms pay the BMC a digging fee like earlier or they themselves relay a road, as mandated by a new directive, the amounts would be much less than that spent under HDT procedure. This, the source said, was because the machine needed for the technology was very expensive.

The BMC's recent circular saying that from March, utility firms themselves will have to fill the trenches they dig and that the civic body will not appoint a contractor to do so has started a dispute. As the firms willthemselves have to relay roads after a project, they will not have to pay the BMC any trenching fee.

Experts, however, said the BMC could not shirk its responsibility of reinstating dug roads as there was no guarantee that a utility firm concerned would do the job properly. "When contractors are appointed to reinstate dug stretches, a three-year period is set for them. Within that guarantee period, if the road starts showing signs of wear and tear, then the contractor has to repair it again. But this new circular gives no such guarantee," said Samajwadi Party corporator Rais Shaikh.

Also caught in the digging controversy are five utility firms, against which the BMC has registered an FIR and sent a circular for unauthorized laying of cables. The circular was issued after the civic body found that Tulip Telecom, Reliance Communication and Tata Tele Services installed ducts in trenches for which the M-East ward office had granted permission not to them but to Tata Power Co Ltd and Mahanagar Gas Ltd. Due to the unauthorized laying of cables, each company has caused the BMC a loss of around Rs 2.97 crore.
 

Last Updated on Friday, 15 February 2013 10:59
 


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