Urban News

  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size
Water Supply

Water crisis dominates VMC meet

Print PDF

Source : The Hindu Date : 30.06.2009

Water crisis dominates VMC meet

Staff Reporter

Ratna Bindu asks officials to address the issue immediately

 


‘Uniforms to be distributed in a phased manner’

Donars come forward to donate benches in all schools


- PHOTO: RAJU V.

Sparks fly: Corporators of various parties argue over the issue of drinking water scarcity during the general body meeting of the Vijayawada Municipal Corporation on Monday.

VIJAYAWADA: Drinking water crisis, bad condition of some of the corporation-run schools, delay in distribution of school uniforms, controversy over giving permission to erect mobile phone towers and distribution of house sites to employees of the VMC at Gunadala were some of the issues that dominated the general body meeting of the VMC on Monday.

The meeting continued on the second day as only a few issues on the agenda were discussed on the first day on Saturday.

The ruling Congress admitted that drinking water problem loomed large over the city, more particularly in divisions 51 to 59. Mayor M.V. Ratna Bindu asked the officials to take steps on war-footing to provide water to residents of Ajit Singh Nagar, Vambay Colony and other fringe and hilly areas. She and Vijayawada MP Lagadapati Rajagopal, who was present at the meeting for a brief period, said that drinking water problem had come to their notice.

“People from areas like Ajit Singh Nagar keep calling me every day complaining of drinking water shortage. You (officials) must address this at the earliest,” Ms. Ratna Bindu said.

Superintending Engineer P. Adiseshu said that the 11 MGD plant, which was under construction, would be operational in the next couple of days. It would solve the drinking water crisis in the city, as the areas that were getting the underground water being supplied by the Corporation would get Krishna water, he assured.

Schools

Responding to a discussion on VMC-run schools, Municipal Commissioner P. S. Pradyumna said that school uniforms for the children studying in these schools would be distributed in a phased manner. It would cost Rs. 75 lakh to supply uniforms to 25,000 students studying in these schools. Some donors had come forward to donate benches in all schools, and they were suggested to adopt top schools and develop them completely, he said.

Some corporators expressed the fear that the mobile phone towers were causing health problems to the local people and, hence, the companies concerned should not be permitted to erect the towers.

City Planner P. Timma Reddy said that a GO issued by the government on this issue had not defined the word “neighbour”, which was causing confusion. The High Court had given a stay in this regard, and any decision regarding erecting new towers could be taken only after the court pronounced its judgment.

House sites

Mr. Pradyumna, replying to queries on house sites to municipal employees, said that the sites would be registered if the members were willing to pay the present registration charges. This was mandatory according to the laid down rules, or alternatively the employees could represent Chief Minister seeking exemption.

Last Updated on Tuesday, 30 June 2009 06:55
 

Dealing with storm water

Print PDF

Source : The Hindu Date : 27.06.2009

Dealing with storm water

A source control strategy will look at ‘retention’ and ‘detention’ methods

Consider an undeveloped plot of land in a city. A fairly level site with no construction on it yet. When it rains on this plot, depending on the intensity and volume of rainfall, this is what is most likely to happen:

Ten per cent of it will runoff as storm water, about 90 per cent of it will be absorbed by the soil. But only about 10 per cent of this 90 per cent will infiltrate and percolate to become groundwater, 80 per cent of it will most likely come up through the soil and either evaporate or evapo-transpirate, being taken up by the roots of plants and trees and sent out into the atmosphere through the leaves.

Now consider the same site with construction on it. Ninety per cent of the rain falling on it will run off as storm water, about five per cent will evaporate or evapo-transpirate and about five per cent will infiltrate and percolate into the ground.

This 90 per cent run-off now races to low lying areas, overwhelms the drainage system and causes urban flooding.

The double whammy comes from the fact that urban areas are prone to increased rainfall in volume and intensity because of the heat island effect, where the crust of the city such as roads, pavements and buildings absorb heat and radiate it into the atmosphere, causing temperatures to go up and for the rain clouds to fall more and faster.

Solutions

A source control strategy will look at two major methods called retention and detention. Retention is to store storm water. Since most storm water comes from individual sites, these sites can act responsibly to retain or detain the water. Retaining is a more permanent affair while detention means a temporary holding of the water before its release into the drainage network.

Retention can be as simple as storing rooftop rainwater in a drum. By placing a rain barrel of 5,000 litres capacity and leading their 200 sq.m. rooftop rainwater to the barrel, the residents can not only ensure that rainfall does not go out of the house but also collect additional water ‘straight from the sky’ for their use. Retention can also be taking the rooftop rainwater and storing it in sumps.

Use of wells

Detention is a slightly different affair. This is easily done by making recharge wells and leading the rooftop rainwater into them. They will gulp 6,000 to 10,000 litres in a day and ensure that the water goes to the aquifer than to the storm water drain.

Some of the water may emerge as base flows and some make up the underground water table. Typical recharge wells in the Bangalore context are three feet in diameter and 20 feet deep.

Detaining structures can also be placed in the storm water drain or adjacent to it, thus picking up and recharging storm water.

Rainwater harvesting rules help facilitate storm water management, provided they are designed and implemented with care. Cities which seek to manage water harmoniously can avoid floods and augment their water supply through these retaining and detaining structures. The choice is ours and we must make wise decisions now.

Last Updated on Saturday, 27 June 2009 06:21
 

Groundwater data available for users

Print PDF

Source : The Hindu Date : 25.06.2009

Groundwater data available for users

Staff Reporter

KOCHI: In Kerala, 30 per cent of the groundwater blocks are unsafe, that is, they are either semi-critical, critical or overexploited. This is against the national average of 18 per cent unsafe groundwater blocks.

This was indicated at a district-level Data Users’ Workshop held by the State Groundwater Department under the hydrology project.

Inaugurating the workshop, District Collector M. Beena said that environmental factors need to be reviewed along with developmental activities, especially in Ernakulam, where a lot of developmental activities are going on.

The data collected by the groundwater department in this regard will be of good use for planning any major activity, she said.

The data collection on ground water had been going on since the project was launched in 1997. But there was no deliberate sharing of data with anyone. It was made available only when someone asked.

Dr. Beena said the data collected would be of much use in planning developmental projects as they would provide more meaning since they are more specific and locally relevant.

Last Updated on Friday, 26 June 2009 07:45
 


Page 407 of 414