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Coimbatore Corporation Zoo witnessing animal deaths

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The Hindu       01.12.2014 

Coimbatore Corporation Zoo witnessing animal deaths

The civic body has placed the zoo under the care of officials from health wing

The standard of maintenance has come down in Coimbatore Corporation Zoo. —File photo: S. SIVA SARAVANAN
The standard of maintenance has come down in Coimbatore Corporation Zoo. —File photo: S. SIVA SARAVANAN

Nine sambar deer, six spotted deer, a silver pheasant and more than 20 snakes have died at the Coimbatore Corporation Zoo in the past couple of months.

According to sources, the latest to die was a sambar deer, a few days ago.

The civic body officials said that the deaths had to do with old-age and illness but knowledgeable sources alleged that there was more to it. The animals, particularly the snakes, starved, there was shortage of medicines as well and that there was none to treat the animals.

The zoo is without a director as the civic body relieved K. Asokan more than a month or so ago to enable him to join his parent organisation, the Animal Husbandry Department.

The sources alleged that in a few cases, the zoo staff did not inform the authorities concerned of the deaths and that delayed post-mortem, which ought to have been conducted mandatorily within 24 hours. The staff also fudged the registers to change the death of animals.

The standard of maintenance, too, had come down.

Following the repatriation of Mr. Asokan, the Corporation administration placed the zoo under the care of officials from the health wing. The health wing officials said that there were “a few deaths but those were due to old-age”.

But, there seemed to be a campaign to create a controversy out of the animals’ death, which was unwarranted.

Visit

The issue forced the Commissioner K. Vijayakarthikeyan to visit the zoo a couple of days ago.

He had asked officials to keep stock of necessary medicines, improve the upkeep, install closed circuit television cameras, and immediately take steps to obtain licence from the Central Zoo Authority.

Dr. Karthikeyan said that he would be writing to the Secretary, Animal Husbandry Department, for the appointment of a new director as well.

 

Corpn. cleans Sanganoor Canal in stretches

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The Hindu     01.12.2014   

Corpn. cleans Sanganoor Canal in stretches

Sanganoor Canal in Coimbatore being desilted on Saturday.— Photo: K. Ananthan
Sanganoor Canal in Coimbatore being desilted on Saturday.— Photo: K. Ananthan

The Coimbatore Corporation has begun cleaning the Sanganoor Canal in stretches. The Canal runs for over 10 km within the city.

According to sources, the work has begun in Ward 10 in West Zone near the Mettupalayam Road – Sanganoor Road junction.

The work was for one-and-a-half km at Rs. 10 lakh. From the junction, the Corporation would clean the Canal till Periyar Nagar.

The reason for choosing the stretch was that it was full of bushes and that had obstructed the flow of water.

In Ganapathy in North Zone, the Corporation had decided to spend Rs. 19 lakh to clean the stretch from Maniakarampalayam to Ganapathy in two phases. At present, it was cleaning the Kattabomman Street stretch of the Canal.

The sources said that stretch to be cleaned measured around five km and covered Wards 40, 41, 46 and 47 in North Zone.

Likewise, the Corporation had planned to clean the Canal stretch near Sivananda Colony.

This area fell under the Central Zone, where the officials had prepared estimate for around Rs. 25 lakh.

They said that the Corporation wanted to clean the Canal with its funds without awaiting the State Government clearance for the funds and that was the reason that it had split the cleaning work in zonal packages for local financial approval.

If the project were to be taken as one package, the cost would surpass Rs. 1 crore, which was beyond the Corporation Council’s power to sanction projects.

Mayor P. Rajkumar said that the Corporation had taken up the project that was a long pending demand of people.

The Canal cleaning work would help easy drainage of flood waters.

But sources said that the civic body was executing the project at a time when the North East Monsoon was declining.

Ideally, it should have cleaned the Canal prior to the South West Monsoon as it would have helped in discharging rainwater and prevented inundation of low-level areas.

The State Government had recently approved of the Corporation’s proposal to lay a road on the Canal’s bank.

 

Chennai Corporation to roll out SWOT analysis for its schools

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The Hindu      01.12.2014    

Chennai Corporation to roll out SWOT analysis for its schools

In a renewed effort to give Chennai Corporation schools a leg up, the civic body’s officials are making a fresh assessment of all its 282 schools through an analysis of admission data.

Sources at the Corporation said a SWOT analysis would be conducted by taking into account admission statistics of the past three years in all Corporation schools.

“We are trying to understand why admission may have dropped in certain areas and figure ways to retain the children in our schools,” a Corporation official said.

Senior Corporation officials will be making field visits to the schools.

“A senior official visited one of our schools in north Chennai recently, to assess the possibility of converting it into a residential school under Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan,” the official added.

About 56 schools had been merged between the period of 1999 and 2011 due to low enrolment.

Recently, a resolution was passed at the Corporation council to convert 12 defunct Corporation schools into shelters for homeless persons.

Further, unused school buildings have been turned into offices for the Corporation.

Corporation officials, however, said that as far as quality of education is concerned, the schools are on a par with private ones.

“Maybe we lack good marketing skills, but our students are doing just as well. We are just facing stiff competition from private schools, as parents believe it is below their station to admit their children in Corporation schools. We need to figure out a way to dispel that myth,” a senior Corporation official said.

 


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