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Tamil Nadu News Papers

Corporation recommends widening of Vayalur Road

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The Hindu 14.12.2009

Corporation recommends widening of Vayalur Road

Special Correspondent

Steps to be taken to extend underground drainage system


CIVIC: Corporation Commissioner T.T.Balsamy (left) chairing a consultative meeting with representatives of consumer organisations in Tiruchi on Friday.

TIRUCHI: Tiruchi Corporation was taking steps to take over road stretches which were under the maintenance of the Highway Department within the Corporation limits, Commissioner T.T.Balsamy has said.

Speaking at a consultative meeting with representatives of consumer organisations here on Friday, Mr.Balsamy said the Corporation would also recommend to the State Highways to widen the Vayalur Road, which has emerged as an arterial road.

Steps were being taken to extend the underground drainage system to the omitted areas in the city.

Work on the laying of the Anna Nagar link road would be expedited. Steps would be taken to remove encroachments in public places in the city and action would also be initiated against roadside eateries which dump waste causing unhygienic conditions.

Owners of vacant plots would be instructed to clean up their sites and action would be taken against them if unhygienic conditions prevail at the sites.

The Commissioner assured to establish a park underneath the Thennur road overbridge in the city. The drive to impound stray cattle would be continued.

Speaking at the meeting, S.Pushpavanam, Secretary, Consumer Protection Council, Tamil Nadu, stressed the need for extending the underground drainage scheme to the omitted areas in the city.

He called for steps to improve hygiene in the Central Bus Stand and removal of encroachments on the Nandi Kovil Street, those between the Central Bus Stand and the Railway Junction and those near the KMC Hospital. Steps should be taken to prevent adulteration of edible oil in some of the retail shops in the Gandhi Market, he said.

Sakunthala Srinivasan, president, Payaneetalar Iyyakkam, urged the Corporation officials to seize consumables and other products, without expiry date, that are sold in the market.

M.Sekaran, President, Federation of Consumer and Service Organisations, urged the Corporation to take steps to construct additional drains near Ranjithapuram. Steps should be taken to prevent discharge of sewage into open drains in Varaganeri and few other places in the city.

City Engineer S.Raja Mohammed, Corporation Health Officer K.C.Cheran, Executive Engineers R.Chandran and S.Arunachalam, S.Mohan, president of the Thennaga Nugarvor Padukappu Mattrum Manitha Urimai Kazhagam, D.Muthukumar, president, Tamil Nadu Nugarvor Sangam, S.Mathivanan, vice president, Thennindia Nugarvor Sangam, and others spoke.

Last Updated on Monday, 14 December 2009 01:48
 

Slew of beautification plans ready

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The Hindu 14.12.2009

Slew of beautification plans ready

S. Aishwarya

— Photo: K.V. Srinivasan

PROMISING: An aerial view of the park formed recently on the bank of the Cooum river in Egmore.

CHENNAI: If all goes well with the proposed project of Cooum beautification, the scenes of 1970s, when the water-body was at its beauty best, would be recreated. The Chennai Corporation, on its part, is ready with a slew of plans to beautify the land along the banks of Cooum.

The work, in coordination with the Public Works Department (PWD), will begin from St. Andrew’s Bridge. “PWD would help us in retrieving encroached lands and our job is to make sure the place becomes lush and scenic,” Corporation Commissioner Rajesh Lakhoni says. With the Elevated Expressway project also on the anvil, the Corporation makes sure a thorough consultation with all departments is done before beginning the beautification work.

The depiction of the Corporation’s proposal promises a complete makeover to the waterbody. If one has to go by the pictures, the river would be bordered with lush trees and the shaded area would be extended to several metres. Seeking help from Horticulture Department and also from private consultants, the Corporation, is all set to doll up the river banks. The State government’s plan to add entertainment options such as boat jetties in the 30-metre wide river channel, in lines with the pleasure boat ride that was launched in 1973, would follow the beautification. The attempt to bring the ailing river back to life has sparked hopes among residents. Hemachandra Rao, a philatelist, who has taken boat ride on Buckingham canal, recalls the times when the rides in Cooum were a luxury. “Though it was for a short time, it was such a hit among people. An old lady once told me she used to pick up pebbles from the riverbed of Cooum. The water had been so crystal clear,” he says.

Sultan Ahmed Ismail, Head of the Department of Biotechnology, The New College, says the effluent discharge into the Cooum must be sealed and a sustainable solution to prevent any illegal sewage discharge should be worked out.

“The river mouth which is the first victim to the pollution must be constantly dredged. Small decentralised sewage treatment plants could be placed in the parks that would treat residential sewage discharge.”

Lamenting the present state of the Cooum, Rajendra Panickar, a 70-year-old resident of Chetpet, says: “I had once seen the river in its purest form. We have a good opportunity to restore the river that would otherwise disappear altogether.”

Last Updated on Monday, 14 December 2009 01:42
 

City awash with dreams of a clean Cooum

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The Hindu 14.12.2009

City awash with dreams of a clean Cooum

T. Ramakrishnan

Since the earliest proposal was mooted in 1890, the river has been bothering citizens and policymakers alike

CHENNAI: The Cooum question never vanishes. C.N. Annadurai, former Chief Minister, once described the Cooum river as a black spot on the fair face of Chennai.

Eleven months ago, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh too had made a reference to the river. Dr Singh, who laid the foundation stone in January for the elevated corridor project from Chennai Port to Maduravoyal, said the Cooum would get beautified by the corridor project.

Deputy Chief Minister M.K. Stalin, at a function last week, called for realising Chief Minister M. Karunanidhi’s “dream project” — Cooum beautification.

Ever since the earliest recorded proposal was mooted in 1890, the river, characterised by pollution and the presence of squalid shanties, has always been bothering Chennai citizens and policymakers alike.

Victim of urbanisation?

One can argue that the Cooum is a victim of urbanisation. But the fact is that this natural watercourse has, over the years, been reduced to a carrier of sullage, sewage and even cattle wash. Officially speaking, there are 127 identified sewage outfalls into the river, out of which 85 are in use. A study revealed that 21 types of fish species were found in the river in the late 1970s but, not any more.

The banks of the river have been the “living space” for thousands of families. Citing the 2003 enumeration, an official of the Water Resources Department (WRD) of the Public Works Department (PWD) says that 9, 000 families are among the encroachers. About 450 commercial establishments have also encroached upon the banks of the watercourse.

Core problem

However, the core problem of the Cooum has been that due to the sand bar, the river mouth near the Napier Bridge gets blocked for most of the time, preventing the river water from draining into the sea. This has, eventually, made the river, in its 18-km-long stretch in Chennai, a stinking cesspool .

In September 1967, six months after the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam captured power for the first time in the State, Chief Minister Annadurai inaugurated the Cooum Improvement Scheme. Mr Karunanidhi was Public Works Minister then.

Installation of a regulator and a sand pump at the river mouth, protecting the sides of the river with cement concrete slabs from the Chetput bridge to the Napier Bridge, provision of a walkway on either side of the river, removal of encroachments on the banks of the river and more importantly, the diversion of sewage were all carried out.

Besides, seven boat jetties were built. Roving boats, powered boats and paddle boats, “all safe and sleek” to quote former civil servant A. Padmanabhan (who was the PWD Secretary in the early 1970s), were made available at a nominal charge. All these works cost the government about Rs. 2.2 crore. At a gala function in February 1973, Mr Karunanidhi, who was the CM then too, inaugurated a pleasure boat service. But, the experiment failed as the sand pump developed snags.

Watercourses

When the DMK returned to power in 1996, the government made another bid – this time covering all important watercourses. The Buckingham Canal and the Adyar were also included. Supported substantially by the Union Environment and Forests Ministry, the Rs.1,200-crore Chennai City River Conservation Project (CCRCP) took off in January 2001. This time, it was aimed at arresting the sewage outfalls and strengthening the sewer network.

After years of implementation, the government, in a recent release, said that as the Project did not cover Tiruvallur district (which accounts for 54 km of the Cooum river stretch), it did not yield desired results.

After the DMK took charge in May 2006, the eco-restoration of the Cooum again came to the fore. To facilitate the implementation of the project, the Chennai River Authority, headed by the Deputy Chief Minister, has been formed. This will, among others, coordinate the implementation of various projects.

The State is carrying out the World Bank-funded Irrigated Agriculture Modernisation and Water Bodies Restoration and Management Project, under which the upper reaches of the river are proposed to be covered. The Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission envisages the execution of a number of water supply and sewerage projects in the city and peri-urban areas. Under the elevated corridor project, 7,400 families, living on the banks of the river, will be covered under the resettlement and rehabilitation component. Officials say Mr.Stalin is keen on executing the Cooum beautification project in a period shorter than 10 years that Singapore took in cleaning its river.

The Chennai citizens are waiting for a day when the Cooum symbolizes cleanliness, if not fragrance.

(With inputs from K. Lakshmi and Liffy Thomas)

Last Updated on Monday, 14 December 2009 01:39
 


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