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Encroachments removed from reserved site

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The Hindu 19.12.2009

Encroachments removed from reserved site

Special Correspondent

The site had been earmarked for a playground

– Photo: K. Ananthan

Swift action: Corporation officials removing encroachments from a reserved site at Brindavan Colony in the city on Friday.

COIMBATORE: The Coimbatore Corporation removed some shops from a reserved site at Brindavan Colony at Uppilipalayam in the city on Friday, as part of its drive to retrieve public purpose sites from encroachers.

Officials of the special squad of the Corporation carried out the encroachment removal. Assistant Town Planning Officer S. Ravichandran said a few petty shops, a chicken stall and a gymnasium had come upon 13.26 cents of a reserved site earmarked for a playground. (Ten per cent of the total residential layout area should be set aside as reserved/public purpose site and handed over to the local body concerned).

The Corporation squad removed the structures and created more space for the nearby bus stop. The encroachments led to congestion at the stop, the official said.

On whether the drive would be sustained across the city, he said Corporation Commissioner Anshul Mishra had ordered that a close watch must be kept on all the reserved sites. The aim was to not only retrieve sites already encroached but also to prevent fresh encroachments on these.

“The one at Brindavan Colony was encroached upon despite the Corporation having put up a board that clearly stated that the land belonged to the local body,” Mr. Ravichandran said.

The Corporation had received complaints from the public against the unauthorised structures.

Last Updated on Saturday, 19 December 2009 03:02
 

Group to rid Elliots Beach of garbage

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The Hindu 19.12.2009

Group to rid Elliots Beach of garbage

Staff Reporter

FILE PHOTO

Action plan: The Elliots Beach will be cleaned in January. —

CHENNAI: Members of the Reclaim Our Beaches (ROB) campaign will clean up the Elliots Beach in Besant Nagar on January 30 and 31 in an attempt to create a sense of belonging among beach users.

Speaking to reporters on Thursday, members of the team, including Archanaa Sekar, Sharadha Shankar, Srikrishna Sekhar and Siddharth Hande, said that the beach was littered with a lot of garbage, including pieces of glass, gutkha wrappers, drinking water packets and corn cobs.

The group, which recently surveyed the garbage on the sands, said they found 1,735 pieces of glass and 8,505 silver foil packets.

When they tried to find who was responsible, residents, the fishing community, tourists and vendors blamed each other.

The members also complained that garbage was not being cleared from the fishing hamlets regularly. There were only two garbage bins for the entire stretch of the beach.

They planned to create awareness among schoolchildren, vendors, the fishing community and the public about the need for understanding that the beach was theirs.

A fundraising rock concert would be held on Sunday. Chennai band Junkyard Groove would perform.

ROB was formed with members of ‘350me’ and ‘Save Chennai Beaches campaign.’

Last Updated on Saturday, 19 December 2009 02:59
 

Stalin inaugurates sewer network at Guindy estate

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The Hindu 19.12.2009

Stalin inaugurates sewer network at Guindy estate

Staff Reporter

It will cater for 1.02 lakh people in Guindy, adjoining areas

Photo: R.Shivaji Rao

Deputy Chief Minister M.K.Stalin studies the sketch of the underground sewerage network at the Guindy industrial estate on Friday. —

CHENNAI: An underground sewer network to cater for nearly 1.02 lakh people in the Guindy Industrial Estate and adjoining residential localities was inaugurated by Deputy Chief Minister M. K. Stalin on Friday.

Opening the sewage main pumping station constructed as part of the Rs.7.35-crore project, he said that apart from 610 industrial units in the Estate, 398 households in the neighbouring areas such as Arulayamman Pettai, Reddy Street, Nagireddy Thottam and Labour Colony have been provided with sewer connections. Of the total project cost, Rs.2.57 crore was contributed by Guindy Industrial Estate Manufacturers Association.

The network would help in arresting the discharge of sewage into Adyar river through seven outfalls in the area, he added.

On the occasion, Mr.Stalin distributed the sewerage connection sanction orders to some of the beneficiaries, including industrial units.

Chennai Metrowater officials said the 20-km network is connected to two pumping stations with a cumulative capacity of nearly 18 million litres a day (mld) catering to north and south phases of the estate. A third pumping station with a capacity of 2.8 mld is for exclusively pumping out sewage from Nagireddy Thottam as a deep sewer system was not feasible there due to space constraints.

The network has been linked to Nesapakkam sewage treatment plant. It took almost three years to complete the project as there were no records about the other infrastructure facilities in the estate. “We found 50 buried culverts while implementing the project,” an official of Metrowater said.

The project was one of the components of Integrated Infrastructure Development scheme taken up to improve facilities at the estate. Municipal Administration and Water Supply Secretary Niranjan Mardi, SIDCO Chairman and Managing Director N.S.Palaniappan and Metrowater Managing Director Shivdas Meena participated in the function.

Last Updated on Saturday, 19 December 2009 02:57
 


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