Urban News

  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size
Tamil Nadu News Papers

Corporation cracks down on smoking in public places

E-mail Print PDF

The Hindu 09.12.2009

Corporation cracks down on smoking in public places

Special Correspondent

Violators will have to pay spot fine or will be handed over to police

— Photo: M. Periasamy.

INTENSIVE DRIVE: A Coimbatore Corporation health wing staff member tells the public to desist from smoking in public places during a drive at the town bus stand at Gandhipuram on Tuesday.

COIMBATORE: With the objective of turning Coimbatore into a ‘no-smoking’ city by January 2010, the Coimbatore Corporation has begun an intensive crackdown on smoking in public places.

Those caught smoking in public places such as bus stands and cinemas will have to cough up Rs. 200 in fine, or they will be handed over to the police.

The Corporation is putting up a number of signage across the city to warn people of the ill-effects of smoking, both active and second-hand (passive). The civic body is also warning people of stringent action that is provided for by the Control of Tobacco Products Act, 2004 and the Prohibition of Smoking in Public Places Rules, 2008.

Led by Assistant City Health Officer R. Sumathi, Rapid Response Teams of the Corporation’s City Health Department are swooping on smokers in bus stands, railway stations, cinemas and other areas listed as public places under the Act.

As per the Act, the public places include workplaces, shopping malls, airports, bus stands, railway stations, hotels, cinemas, shops and restaurants.

Corporation Commissioner Anshul Mishra has allotted vehicles for the teams to move about quickly in the city to carry out the drive effectively. According to Dr. Sumathi, the aim is to achieve 100 per cent success in the drive by January 2010. About 10 health officers of local bodies in other parts of the State are here to study the ongoing drive.

On spotting people smoking in public places, the health teams are imposing Rs. 200 fine on them and explaining to them the ill-effects of smoking and also how the smoke from the cigarette and the one exhaled by smokers affect the non-smokers nearby.

On Monday and Tuesday, the teams carried out surprise checks in cinemas. “Intervals are the time when people step out for smoking. Though rules forbid this in cinemas, smoking is still allowed.” Dr. Sumathi says.

Though one of the theatres had put up “no smoking” boards, those who came to view films smoked cigarettes during interval. The manager of the cinema at Ramnagar was pulled up by the health officials. “The Act says clearly that Rs. 200 per smoker can be collected as fine from the management of any public place that allows people to smoke,” Dr. Sumathi says.

“We are telling owners of shops, hotels and tea stalls that they will have to pay hefty fines if they allow anyone to smoke on their premises. Stickers that carry a warning against smoking and conveying the message of the drive are being pasted across the city,” she says.

On Tuesday, the drive began with a sensitisation-cum-crackdown exercise at the town bus stand at Gandhipuram.

“People who come out in the morning every day for a walk in many areas in the city, including the bus stand area, complain that smoking robs them of fresh air that they actually look for during exercise,” the health official says.

The health teams also found two students (of Class X and XI) of a Corporation school smoking along a road. The headmaster of the school was informed immediately and asked to speak to the parents of the boys.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 09 December 2009 03:10
 

Cooum project keeps hopes afloat

E-mail Print PDF

The Hindu 09.12.2009

Cooum project keeps hopes afloat

T. Ramakrishnan

Public Works Department is contemplating constructing a series of check-dams on the river

— Photo: Water Resources Department - PWD

WHAT IS AND WHAT WILL BE: A view of the Cooum river as it is now and (right) an artist’s depiction of the Cooum, once the beautification project is completed.

CHENNAI: With the launch of the Rs.1,200-crore Cooum river beautification project, the State government is making yet another attempt at cleaning the Cooum, which has been eluding a lasting solution.

Compared to the Adyar river, the Cooum is more polluted and its problems are more complex.

Senior officials who are associated with the project say that the government has consciously chosen the Cooum which, they feel, is more challenging and the success of this venture will quicken the process of eco-restoration of other water courses in the city.

Originating from the Cooum village in Tiruvallur district, the river meanders for 54 km in that district before reaching the limits of Chennai Corporation. For another 18 km, it travels and joins the sea near the Napier Bridge. Of the total length of 72 km, the river flows in urban and peri-urban areas for 30 km and rural areas for 42 km.

A host of factors has contributed to the Cooum problem. Intensive use of surface water upstream for agriculture, indiscriminate pumping of groundwater leading to reduced base flow in the river, formation of sand bar at the mouth of the river, discharge of untreated sewage and industrial effluents and encroachment along the banks of the river are some of them.

Conscious of the fact that some options for attacking the problem consume more time, the authorities are now focussing on one aspect – removing encroachments in the city limits and developing the areas retrieved into parks. This will ensure aesthetic appeal and utility, an official says, adding that the Chennai Corporation has been entrusted with the responsibility of developing parks.

Approximately, the total length of encroached areas is six km. The removal of encroachments is expected to be completed in a year, the official adds.

There are 9,000 families, which are enumerated by the authorities as having encroached on the banks of the river. Of them, 3,000 are covered under the resettlement and rehabilitation component of the proposed elevated corridor to be executed by the National Highways Authority of India (NHAI). The State government will have to take care of the rest.

As for other components of the project, the strengthening of sewer network and stormwater drains and augmentation of the capacity of sewage treatment plants are among them. The authorities are clear that all sewage outfalls have to be arrested. If only the secondary-treated sewage is let into the river, this will be sufficient for reviving the aquatic life, they say.

The Water Resources Department of the Public Works Department is contemplating constructing a series of check-dams on the river, which, on an average, records (at Thiruverkadu) six thousand million cubic feet (tmcft) annually. Continuous dredging at the mouth is another option being considered by the authorities.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 09 December 2009 03:06
 

Civic body seeks 50 acres for solid waste disposal

E-mail Print PDF

Deccan Herald 08.12.2009

Civic body seeks 50 acres for solid waste disposal

December 8th, 2009
By Our Correspondent

Dec. 7: The long-pending problem of solid waste management and safe garbage disposal should be resolved soon thanks to a Chennai corporation initiative. The corporation has written to Kancheepuram, Tiruvallur and Chengelpat collectors to allot 50 acres of land on the outskirts of the three districts for dumping and processing 3,400 tonnes of garbage generated in the city everyday.

At present, the corporation dumps garbage collected from all 10 zones in the Kodungaiyur and Perungudi dumping yards. “We have been taking effective steps to ensure safe disposal of wastes. The integrated solid waste management system proposed by us would soon start progressing when we get approval,” a senior corporation official told DC. For this, the corporation would engage companies to segregate waste. But the Tamil Nadu Pollution Control Board, which is the sole agency to clear environme-ntal issues with regard to the Perungudi dumping yard, has not given its approval. Also, clearance from Centre for the Kodungaiyur dumping yard is pending.

The tenders for the integrated solid waste management have been finalised. We are awaiting environmental clearance, the official said.

Last Updated on Tuesday, 08 December 2009 08:01
 


Page 1368 of 1640