The Hindu 18.01.2011
KWA draws Mayor's flak
Five-day workshop on urban governance begins
Mayor A.K. Premajam on Monday expressed her displeasure over supply of drinking water by the Kerala Water Authority (KWA) in the city.
“Water management is inefficient, with erratic distribution networks and frequent bursting of pipes. Water is supplied only on alternative days. Old pipes burst when water pressure is high. Many of these pipes require urgent replacement. A Rs.25-crore rehabilitation package is yet to take off. Official procedures are delaying the implementation,” the Mayor said.
Prof. Premajam was inaugurating a five-day workshop on urban governance and management partnership programme, organised by the Local Self Government Department; the Kerala Sustainable Urban Development Project (KSUDP); the Temasek Foundation, a Singapore-government investment firm; and the Singapore Cooperation Enterprise.
The workshop focuses on water management and solid waste management.
The responsibility of the civic body had increased with the merger of Beypore, Elathur and Nallalam- Cheruvannur gramapanchayats to the Corporation, the Mayor said.
She said the geographical area had increased by 40 sq m and the population had increased by 2 lakh in the city, compounding the problems faced by the Corporation authorities. People residing in slum areas and middle-class families were the worst hit.
Prof. Premajam said rapid urbanisation had provided immense facilities but had also brought several disadvantages.
The biggest menace was from plastic waste. Now corporation faced the task of safely disposing plastic accumulated in public places and street corners.
Steps had been taken to improve the situation at the garbage dumping ground at Njeliyanparamba.
The waste rejected from treatment plant was still piling up at the site. Solid waste management had become difficult with the merger of gramapanchayats, the Mayor said.
Speaking on the occasion, Anindita Das Gupta, Chief Urban Planner from Singapore, lauded the functioning of the Kudumbasree units involved in the door-to-door collection of household garbage in the city.
Simon Choor, team leader for water management, said the workshop would help to share experiences gained in Singapore.
K. Krishnakumar, training officer, KSUDP, said the
workshop would provide the officials with an opportunity to apply
concrete lessons in the city. It would also explore the potential for a
long-term collaboration between Kerala and Singapore.