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Mayor Insists on Realistic Remedy

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The New Indian Express              10.02.2014 

Mayor Insists on Realistic Remedy

Kochi Mayor Tony Chammany urged autorickshaw unions to withdraw the strike prior to any discussion. He said the Corporation has made its  position clear in the issue but has not initiated any formal discussions with autorickshaw unions as the district collectorate is already looking into the issue.

“The reasoning that traffic blockades are a regular incident in Kochi and that it results in fuel loss, as the auto drivers complain about, seems to be quite convincing. Discussions should focus on finding a realistic remedy for this problem,” said the Mayor.

But, he added that the solution cannot be met with doing away with metering. “Meter should be down, that’s what the law states and it’s beyond negotiation. And all union leaders whom I have met have agreed to this, it’s only that they want their issues to be resolved,” he said.

The Mayor was said that metering system needs some revision.

 “It’s high time we fix city limit for meters so that the rates to ply inside the city will be different from that to the hinterlands. I understand that this a common practise in Thiruvananthapuram and Kozhikode,” said Tony Chammany. 

 

Corporation Council to Decide on ROB Width Today

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The New Indian Express              10.02.2014 

Corporation Council to Decide on ROB Width Today

A final decision on the alignment of Pachalam ROB and the fate of  the political opposition against it hangs in the outcome of Kochi  Corporation’s council meeting slated for Monday.

While the ruling party is all set to approve the realignment of the ROB  project, the Opposition has decided to intensify protest inside and outside the Corporation from Monday.

The LDF parties would walk out from the council  if the agenda item on ROB’s re-design is approved against their protest. They would also agitate against the ruling council outside the Council meeting too.

Meanwhile, while the Corporation council will discuss the agenda on Pachalam ROB, the Goshree-Pottakuzhi Action Council would stage a dharna in front of the Corporation office on Monday afternoon. The action council members said if the Corporation approves the ROB re-design, they will immediately move to the DMRC office at the Revenue Towers and would burn in effigy the ROB re-design made by the DMRC.

The action council claims it would have around 500 people, including representations from the trader’s association, in attendance for the agitation. It’s the third time the council is going to discuss the ROB re-alignment. The long-pending ROB project at Pachalam returned to the spotlight in December when the DMRC proposed a 10 metre ROB, which according to them would need merely `33 crore, instead of the earlier proposed JNNURM-funded 22-meter ROB penned to cost `136 crore.

In January, after a brief discussion, an agitated opposition had walked out of the Council meeting against this re-alignment proposal.

The first council meeting of February ended with the opposition parties staging a dharna in front of the Mayor’s chamber, and writing to the authorities against giving approval to the realignment without a discussion in the council.  It is after creating such mayhem that the council is bracing itself for a formal discussion and to give a final word on the ROB on Monday.

“The 22 metre-wide ROB proposed under JNNURM was conceived to decongest traffic in the city. But, the new design of a narrow 10m bridge is an attempt to suffice vested interests and garner votes in the coming election, jeopardizing development of the city,” said Opposition leader K J Jacob. However, the Congress councillors and other members of the ruling council said that the Opposition is playing politics on the ROB issue as polls are around the corner.

 

AMC demands Rs 1,125 crore from government for city's development

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The Times of India             08.02.2014

AMC demands Rs 1,125 crore from government for city's development

AURANGABAD: The officials of the Aurangabad Municipal Corporation (AMC) on Friday urged 14th Union finance commission to grant special funds to the tune of Rs 1,125 crore for the city's development.

However, mayor Kala Oza and other office-bearers of the AMC, who were in Mumbai to seek the state government's permission to the long pending water distribution project in the city, could not meet chief minister Prithviraj Chavan on Friday.

Talking about the poor condition of roads and other civic amenities in the city, Oza urged the commission to grant special funds. Oza said the municipal corporation was established 32 years ago and over the period, the city has witnessed a sea change. "However, people still have to rely on old infrastructure. Today, population has crossed the 10-lakh mark and the city area has surpassed 142 sq km. Looking at such a huge growth, the city desperately needs better facilities and to provide it, the civic body falls short of funds," she said.

Oza said the civic body had repeatedly urged the state government to release funds for the city's developments.

Commenting about the city's roads, Oza said they were designed some 40-45 years ago. "It is extremely difficult to rebuild all the roads with the help of revenue generated by the municipal corporation. The civic body needs at least Rs 500 crore to develop roads as several foreign and domestic tourists visit the city every year," she said.

Besides, Oza said the civic body requires Rs 50 crore for making significant improvement in the city's solid waste management system, Rs 200 crore for streamlining nullahs, Rs 50 crore for the construction of new schools, Rs 200 crore for installing for streetlights, Rs 50 crore for strengthening the fire brigade department, Rs 50 crore for improving of public toilets and Rs 25 crore for the construction of bridges.

Last Updated on Saturday, 08 February 2014 07:52
 


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