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Guwahati Municipal Corporation polls unlikely before monsoon

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The Times of India                      16.03.2013

Guwahati Municipal Corporation polls unlikely before monsoon

GUWAHATI: The state election commission's plans to hold the Guwahati Municipal Corporation (GMC) election before the arrival of the monsoon may not materialize as the GMC authorities missed the deadline to publish the draft on delimitation of 31 new wards on Friday.

The state election commissioner clarified that GMC polls can't be held until the delimitation of the wards is completed. The government has decided to bring down the number of GMC wards from 60 to 31 this time.

The GMC authorities were asked to publish the draft on the delimitation by Friday in a meeting convened by the state election commission in March first week.

"It will take some more time to finalize the map of the 31 new wards. We have requested the state election commission to extend the deadline," said GMC collector Deba Kumar Mishra.

The elected body of the GMC stands dissolved since May 2008 after several GMC councillors resigned due to an internal rift. Since then, it has been functioning without public representatives.
Last Updated on Saturday, 16 March 2013 08:30
 

Honorarium of local body members hiked

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The Hindu                           16.03.2013

Honorarium of local body members hiked

Staff Reporter 

Amount to be raised by Rs.1,000.

The government has decided to increase the honorarium of elected representatives of local bodies by Rs.1,000, Finance Minister K.M. Mani said in his budget speech. The government has also decided to allocate Rs.4,000 crore to the local bodies during the coming financial year, which is 23.9 per cent more than the allocation made during the current fiscal.

Local bodies would be provided a sum of Rs.5.5 crore to improve the conditions of slaughter houses in villages. To improve the functioning of village panchayats, ten panchayats from each of the districts would be selected for getting ISO certification, he said. The Erattupetta panchayat would be upgraded to the level of municipality.

 

Most contaminated drinking water

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The Hindu                      15.03.2013

Most contaminated drinking water

 

Kerala has the highest chemical/bacterial contaminated drinking water among 28 tested States in the country, according to the Union Ministry of Drinking Water and Sanitation, the State’s Economic Review for 2011-2012 has stated.

As on January 9 this year, out of the total 1,02,900 tested sources in the State, nearly 34 per cent had been identified with contamination of iron, fluoride, salinity, nitrate, arsenic and other bacteria with Kozhikode district having the most contaminated water in the State.

Out of 10,803 tested sources, 54 per cent were found to be contaminated there while Thiruvananthapuram, Kannur, Kasaragod, Ernakulam and Palakkad being the other vulnerable districts in terms of access to safe drinking water in the State.

The Review, which states that there was a mistaken notion that Kerala was abundant in water resources, points out that despite the southwest and north east monsoons, there was a large spatial and temporal variation in the rainfall system and the abundance of water resources in one season led to shortage in the next season. Rapid urbanization, increased economic activity, population explosion and changes in land use pattern among others were widening the gap between the demand for and the supply of water.

It calls for an integrated water management system and augmentation of existing water resources.

 


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