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Chennai Corporation ropes in NGO to clean Marina Beach

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The Times of India        30.12.2014  

Chennai Corporation ropes in NGO to clean Marina Beach

 

CHENNAI: In the wake of several complaints about lack of cleanliness on the Marina Beach, the Chennai Corporation has dropped private operator Ramky Enviro and roped in Shudda, an NGO, to clean the beach on a pilot basis.

The civic body stated that it would treat and maintain the beach sand space as a separate entity sans roads and pavements.

"A separate division of officials have been given the task of monitoring the garbage clearance work so that the beach would soon look like coastlines abroad," Mayor Saidai S Duraisamy said during the corporation council on Monday.

Marina, which is the world's second largest beach, covers an area of 25.19 sq km where it stretches 13 km in length and in width between 300 and 437 meters.

Corporation officials said the number of conservancy workers deployed by Ramkey was not sufficient to clean the stretch. "Ramky said they required 40 staff with a salary of Rs 5,550 per person every month," the council resolution stated.

Shudda has been managing a 3-kilometer from Anna Samadhi up to Light House. It was already involved in four other waste management projects with the Chennai Corporation.

"Corporation officials told us they had concerns of the coastline not being tidy since Marina is an important tourist spot," said Nisha Thota, managing trustee, Shudda.

The new team has 132 staff including locals from the slums who split themselves into working on three different shifts every day. "Volunteers from corporates and other NGOs have also been coming in for clean- ups us periodically," Thota said.

Ramkey Enviro handles conservancy works in three important zones- Teynampet, Kodambakkam and Adyar, which covers the Marina and Elliot's Beach.

Cleaning work on Besant Nagar was handed over to another private operator. While the beach sands alone have changed hands, Ramky will continue garbage collection from residences and is also responsible for sweeping the roads. 

 

Survey of street vendors, hawkers in Salem

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The Hindu           29.12.2014  

Survey of street vendors, hawkers in Salem

To enumerate the number of street vendors and hawkers in the city, a Chennai-based private company would begin a global positioning system (GPS) satellite survey on December 29.

The Street Vendors (Protection of Livelihood and Regulation of Street Vending) Act, 2014 paves way for protecting the right of urban street vendors and to regulate their vending activities.

The Act mandates forming a Town Vending Committee that should conduct a survey of all existing street vendors within Corporation limits at least once in five years and also frame guidelines for relocating such vendors.

The Act provides the right to vendors, who possesses a certificate of vending, to be entitled for new area, for carrying out vending activities, that is determined by the committee.

Hence, the Corporation has appointed the company to carry out the survey in the city limits so that welfare measures and their rights are protected.

Corporation Commissioner K.R. Selvaraj has requested all vendors to provide complete details to the surveyors so that the survey report is accurate and used for further decision-making process.

Though no proper survey has been carried out so far by the Corporation, about 6,817 hawkers are said to be in the civic body limits.

Vendors asked to provide complete details to those conducting survey

 

Kumbakonam Municipality to hold paperless council meet

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The Hindu         29.12.2014   

Kumbakonam Municipality to hold paperless council meet

Part of civic body’s plan to introduce e-governance, seamless service

Stepping into its 148th year, the Kumbakonam Municipality is all set to conduct a paperless council meet, the first of it kind in its history and among the local bodies in the region, here on Tuesday.

The Kumbakonam Municipality came into being in 1866 and during its chequered history has been responsible in developing the civic area and has effectively contributed to the pilgrims' cause, particularly during the Mahamaham festival, which falls once in 12 years.

The next Mahamaham is due in 2016, when the civic body would be celebrating its 150th anniversary.

In fact, the Kumbakonam Municipality bagged the State government's Best Municipality Award for the current year.

In line with the State government's desire to reduce the amount of paper work involved in governmental transactions and to introduce futuristic concepts such as e-governance and paperless office to provide seamless and expeditious service to the public, the municipality has decided to conduct its next regular monthly meet scheduled for Tuesday in a paperless manner.

Officials here claim that this could be the first such instance by a civic body in the region.

Following this, all circulars, agenda for the meetings, invitations and notices have been digitalised and work has been going on at a feverish pace to meet the Tuesday deadline.

All the 45 ward councillors have been given Tablet PCs with 3G connectivity, 8GB memory card, besides being trained in e-signature and other applications necessary for transacting regular business.

The agenda for Tuesday's meet along with the invitations have already been mailed to the respective councillors and officials a couple of days back and they have been duly digitally acknowledged to set the stage for the first paperless council meet.

Already the Kumbakonam Municipality is setting the benchmark in providing separate plastic waste bins to each and every household for effective solid waste management and segregation of waste at source.

 


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