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Urban Planning

Sewerage network project trouble

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The New Indian Express  04.10.2010

Sewerage network project trouble

KOCHI:The protests by the locals of divisions  four and six  of the Kochi Corporation have resulted in the expulsion of these areas from the sewerage network project proposed to be set up by the local body. After a failed attempt to convince the locals that the project would in no way harm them, the authorities have prepared a detailed project report (DPR) for the sewerage network project which envisages centralised treatment of sewerage waste from every household and firm.

According to the ADB sponsored project, each house and firm under the project will be connected to the collection centres at eight locations through pipelines. To take the waste to the treatment plant at Mundamvely, pump houses will have to be constructed at these locations.

But people at divisions  four and six are against constructing a pump house there. “We had asked the people’s representatives, including the councillor from the area, to convince the people that the project would be beneficial to them. But they failed in the attempt and we will have to exempt these areas for the time being,” an official said.

Now divisions five and six  will be completely out of the project. The residents of divisions four, seven and nine will get only partial benefits of the project. According to the original proposal, 2.5 lakh people living in 15 divisions would have been the benefactors.

The ` 1 billion plant will have a capacity of 23 million litres per day. Apart from the treatment plant, eight pumping stations are required for the completion of the project.

Contamination of water is the biggest threat faced by Kochi. The presence of faecal remains in potable water supplied in the city have been posing serious health hazards.

Last Updated on Monday, 04 October 2010 08:18
 

Unsafe cell towers not demolished

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The Deccan Chronicle  04.10.2010

Unsafe cell towers not demolished

Hyderabad, Oct. 3: Cellphone companies have by and large ignored the GHMC’s one-time settlement scheme to regularise communication towers. They have not even demolished about 290 towers identified as unsafe.

Under the scheme, cellular companies would have to submit data on the number of towers they had installed until 2008 to the GHMC, and pay `1 lakh as a one-time fee to regularise them. Cellphone firms have regularised only 300 of the 2,000 unregistered towers.

The glitch is that before 2008, cellular companies were not required to get the GHMC’s permission to set up towers atop buildings. Then, aggrieved citizens approached the High Court stating that structurally unfit towers posed a danger to their lives. The state issued orders asking cellular firms to seek the civic body’s permission before installing any tower.

The HC directed the GHMC to check the towers for structural fitness. The civic body duly appointed a committee comprising experts from the JNTU, Hyderabad, and other institutions which identified 290 towers as structurally unstable. These towers have not been demolished yet.

A GHMC official said the cellular companies wanted to know on what basis the GHMC had fixed the `1 lakh fee.

The cellphone firms say that prior to 2008, the state had issued orders stating that companies only need to intimate the corporation. There was no need for get GHMC permission, they contend. The firms have approached the HC to block the fee. The chief city planner of the GHMC, Mr G.V. Raghu, said the corporation was “relentlessly pursuing” the cases in the court.

Last Updated on Monday, 04 October 2010 06:32
 

Build on 25% land, help maintain rest: BMC caretaker plan for open spaces

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Indian Express 01.10.2010

Build on 25% land, help maintain rest: BMC caretaker plan for open spaces

Even as the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) finalises its controversial caretaker policy for roping in private parties for the maintenance of fast-shrinking open spaces in Mumbai, officials said one of the fresh ideas in the new policy will be a system whereby the civic body will allot a plot of land to a private player, permit some construction on 25 per cent of the land as allowed by the policy, and charge the private player a fee while pumping in its own manpower to oversee the maintenance of the remainder of the plot.

Such a move is expected to be met with stiff opposition from activists who have opposed the caretaker policy on the grounds that it clears the decks for private parties to gain control of BMC-owned public land for a pittance while denying common people access to these open spaces meant for recreational purposes.

According to the new rules that are being finetuned, 75 per cent of a plot of land handed over to a private party under the caretaker policy will be always accessible to Mumbaiites, demarcated by constructing a boundary wall. It will be maintained by BMC staff, with money paid by the ‘caretaker’. “We have suggested that the caretaker can either pay for the beautification of the 75 per cent, or do it himself but according to our plans,” said a senior official of the BMC. The BMC can then charge the caretaker a fee while continuing to control access rights and other modalities.

 In order to ensure that the caretaker complies with the regulations, one suggestion being considered by those drafting the policy is that development rights to the remaining 25 per cent of the plot, as permissible under the existing caretaker policy, should be denied until the private party pays the charges for maintenance and beautification, said the official.

Additional Municipal Commissioner Aseem Gupta said that the BMC is taking into consideration these suggestions. “Ultimately we will ensure that the private party complies with our rules,” he said, adding that the policy is not yet finalised.

Activists campaigning for the protection of the city’s last open spaces say the policy is flawed, and ultimately gifts away portions of public land to private players. “This means by just collecting the money to maintain 75 per cent of the space, the BMC is giving away the precious 25 per cent of open space, practically free. Somehow the BMC is trying to please everybody, but making a hash while drafting such an important policy,” said Nayana Kathpalia, co-convenor of non-governmental organisation Citispace. “As the policy gets more and more convoluted, there is more scope for loopholes, which means more manipulation and various interpretations. Ultimately it is the citizens who stand to lose by getting even less open space,” she said.

Activists and citizens also question why the BMC, the country’s richest civic corporation, cannot cough up the few crores needed for the upkeep of open spaces.

Under the re-worked policy, the civic administration is expected to ensure that caretakers for open spaces will be selected after advertisements are published regarding plots available for adoption. While the ‘adoption’ policy permits no construction, the ‘caretaker’ policy allows development on a quarter of the plot of land. This quarter may be used for constructing restaurants or clubhouses. In either case, priority will be given to local citizens’ groups to come forward to maintain these plots either under the adoption policy or the caretaker policy.

The caretaker policy is now being revived after the state government’s stay on the allotments in December 2007 after a spate of protests from angry citizens’ groups who pointed out that public open spaces were being gifted away to private parties while the common Mumbaiite was being denied entry into clubhouses built on such public land.

Last Updated on Friday, 01 October 2010 12:13
 


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