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Towering problem: BMC cleared 1,107 cell sites in city since 2007

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The Times of India  29.11.2010

Towering problem: BMC cleared 1,107 cell sites in city since 2007

MUMBAI: Despite the growing clamour against illegally mushrooming mobile towers, which allegedly pose a hazard to the stability of rickety buildings as well as the health of their inhabitants, the BMC had approved the setting up of another 1,000 giant cellular towers in the last two years.

According to the BMC data, until 2007, there existed 1,628 illegal towers in the city. But, since then, the corporation cleared 1,107 more from the thousands of applications filed by mobile service providers in the period.

While there are no policy guidelines in place on setting up of cell towers atop residential buildings, members of the BMC's civic improvements committee - instead of discussing this aspect of the problem - went on needlessly debating the options the civic body now has in front of it: either bring the illegal towers down, or regularize them by charging a hefty fine.

However, both alternatives do not fit into BMC's current scheme of things. The municipality charges a ground rent to allow cell companies to set up security and control cabins for a tower coming up on its land.

In addition, it currently charges only Rs 5,000 to regularize those that have come up without permission on private or its own land. Then there's the handsome revenue societies get from the service providers as rent for the towers on residential buildings, sometimes in lakhs.

Now, cornered from all sides, the BMC finds itself in a fix. "By not demolishing them over the years, we have only allowed the problem to aggravate. We can't regularize so many with the paltry fine decided arbitrarily by civic officials in the past. The state needs to form a comprehensive policy. Until then, our hands are tied," said a senior BMC official.

The issue came to light recently when a notice of motion was moved by Kurla corporator Kamlakar Naik. In reply, BMC officials revealed, while action has been taken against 145 illegal towers and Rs 24,708 collected in fine, some 1,628 illegal towers are yet to be legalized. Members of the civic improvements committee on Monday demanded that all 1,628 unauthorized towers be razed under the MRTP Act or, if regularized, a hefty fine of Rs 1,00,000 be charged per tower.

"The BMC should immediately stop giving permissions to new towers until the state government formulates a policy for this and demolishes the illegal towers with immediate effect," said committee chairman Manoj Kotak.

Last Updated on Tuesday, 30 November 2010 10:42
 

1,600 mobile towers may be regularised

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Hindustan Times  28.11.2010

1,600 mobile towers may be regularised

Corporators want to regularise more than 1,600 illegal mobile phone towers that have mushroomed in the city. But there is a rider: the mobile phone companies will have to pay a fine of at least Rs 1 lakh per tower. The notice of motion, a written demand made by Manmohan Chonkar, a Shiv Sena corporator, was approved in the civic general body meeting on Friday.

The motion says the civic body should regularise the illegal mobile phone signal transmission towers, but penalise the company for the same. So far, the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) has been charging a nominal fee of Rs 5,000 for regularising a tower.

Chonkar, a corporator from Bandra, wrote to mayor Shraddha Jadhav demanding that if the civic body wasn’t able to take stern action against the illegal towers, then it should regularise them by imposing minimum Rs 1 lakh fine. “The amount charged at present is too less. The civic body should at least charge hefty fine which would help increase BMC’s revenue,” said Chonkar. 

In the past 10 years, the civic body has recovered only Rs 24,708 as fine for 145 mobile towers. “The BMC could not demolish illegal towers or seize any equipment due to a state government directive against doing so,” said a civic official.

Nearly 50% of the mobile towers that exist in the city are illegal.

The civic body’s latest survey shows that there are 3,489 mobile towers in the city and more than 90% are on terrace of buildings. Of these, only 1,861 are legal.

According to the survey, Bandra, Khar, Santacruz and east side of Vile Parle, Andheri and Jogeshwari have 568 illegal mobile towers.  H-East ward (east of Bandra, Khar, Santacruz) has 96, H-West ward (west of Bandra, Khar, Santacruz) has 211, and K-East ward (east of Vile Parle, Andheri and Jogeshwari) has 261 mobile phone towers that have been erected without the civic body’s permission.

According to the Development Control rule amended in 2,000, mobile companies need to get structural stability certificate from a certified architect and housing society’s no-objection certificate to put-up a tower on terrace.

The approved notice of motion about the fine will now be sent to the municipal commissioner Swadheen Kshatriya for his remarks. Kshatriya was not available for comment.

Last Updated on Monday, 29 November 2010 09:56
 

10% layout space for poor

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The Hindu      27.11.2010

10% layout space for poor

V.Geetanath
Draft legislation on slum-free cities

HYDERABAD: The government is planning to make it mandatory to earmark 10 per cent space in new layouts for the poor and the weaker sections in the draft legislation on slum-free cities titled A.P. Slum (Identification, Redevelopment, Rehabilitation and Prevention) Act.

Housing units

Developers will have to handover at least five per cent of the total area to the competent municipal authority to use the land for housing of Economically Weaker Sections (EWS) and another five per cent land, plots, housing units, built up space will have to be earmarked for the Low Income Groups (LIGs) for housing.

The draft legislation based on a Model Slum Act brought out by the Centre for implementing the Rajiv Awas Yojana (RAY) has indicated that such a measure was necessary to prevent future growth of slum and releases adequate land to meet the housing needs of the urban poor.

To ensure that housing units are built for the urban poor and to maintain such group housing, the draft has come out with a ‘Slum Redevelopment Fund' at the respective municipal-level.

Ten per cent from the urban poverty alleviation/urban services to the urban poor schemes, another 10 per cent of all town planning fees, contributions from the Central and State governments, external agencies and revenue from commercial spaces.

Beneficiaries

A slum-free city committee or district committee headed by the respective Municipal Commissioners or district Collectors will decide on the beneficiaries from among the EWS and LIGs besides monitoring migration and enforcing building regulations.

The 10 per cent land quota for the urban will be applicable to even existing land allotments made to various institutions from the unutilised portions and in all the fresh land allotments to be made.

Incentives

Incentives like an additional floor, change of land use, transferrable development rights, concession in fees, rules relaxation, etc., are to be given to developers taking up housing for the poor.

Beneficiaries selected under EWS are entitled to a house with a minimum carpet area of 225 s.ft. (25 sq.mts) dwelling whereas Low Income Group (LIG) beneficiaries are to get 432 sft (48 sq.mts).

 


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