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Water Supply

Water Board to fix meters to check unaccounted losses

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The New Indian Express                        18.03.2013

Water Board to fix meters to check unaccounted losses

 

Water crisis hits Kiran’s home turf

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The New Indian Express                        18.03.2013

Water crisis hits Kiran’s home turf

Even as Rayalaseema is reeling under severe water shortage with fast-depleting ground water and drying water bodies, chief minister N Kiran Kumar Reddy’s home turf Pileru is facing the worst.

Not having any major water bodies near the town apart from a small rivulet, Pilla Eru that remains mostly dry through out the year and the bore wells those are drying up fast, Pileru with 1,200 households and 41,000 population is grappling with the severe water woes. A majority of the localities now gets water once in 5 to 22 days as the drinking water supply by the civic body by tractors falls short to quench the town’s thirst. Families here buy a pot of water at `3 from the tractors, spending around `2,000 a month. 

The civic body here has employed only six tractors which fetch water from far away borewells in five trips a day.

Though the civic body is supplying water through tankers at `600, it is beyond the affordability of the poor. “We buy five to ten pots of water a day, which use strictly for drinking. We even wash our clothes at our work places as we are already spending `25 for water per day,” said  Narayanamma, a daily wager. The woes are even pinching the middle class. “ The water we get at `600 per tanker is just adequate for drinking and bathing. Neither can we spend more nor tread far-off places to fetch water by ourselves. We are not even washing clothes regularly, said a clerk of a government college.

Situation is similar in Indira Nagar Erram Reddy Gunta, Kattu kalava, Boya Palem street, Pedda Masjid Sandhu and others.

 

Water supply to Mysore will not be hit, says minister

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The Times of India                      16.03.2013 

Water supply to Mysore will not be hit, says minister

MYSORE: The water supply will not be hit even though water levels at the Krishnarajsagar dan Kabini dams are low, district minister S A Ramdas said on Friday but admitted that water rationing can be imposed in June.

As of now there is 4.3 tmcft water at KRS and 3.65 tmcft at Kabini dam, which is mainly dead storage.

Mysore is getting 135 cusecs daily from KRS as against 600 cusecs released to Bangalore.

Given the outflow and the availability, water supply to Mysore will not affected, at least till end of May, the minister said after reviewing the water situation with the officials.

He said the water can be drawn from Kabini dam till June without damaging the dam's structure.

The water level at KRS dam is 71.41 ft (maximum if 124.80 ft) and there is 4.3 tmcft available. The water supply can sustain Mysore's needs till May end and we are not planning impose water rationing as of now, he told reporters.

As of now, the city is getting 90 million liters per day (MLD) from Honghalli pumping unit and 67 MLD from Melapura.

The authorities are planning to create a check dam at Melapura pumping unit to ensure availability of the resource.

Ramdas said 1,495 borewells in the city are functioning and generating 4 MLD.

He, however, was critical of JUSCO, the Tata enterprise which is implementing JNNURM project to remodel water distribution network.

JUSCO is not responding to the people's complaints, he stated asserting that the Mysore City Corporation will press 15 tankers to supply water to pockets in the city where water supply has become irregular.
Last Updated on Saturday, 16 March 2013 09:24
 


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