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City limits set to grow

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Deccan Chronicle 24.09.2009

City limits set to grow

September 24th, 2009
By Our Correspondent

Chennai, Sept. 23: Chief minister M. Karunanidhi and deputy CM M.K. Stalin on Wednesday discussed the feasibility of setting up a greater Chennai corporation. During the meeting, presentations on the proposed Tambaram and Avadi corporations were also discussed.

According to sources, the government was keen on expanding the Chennai corporation limit from 176 to 760 sq kms. Corporation of greater Chennai is likely to be created by linking a few suburban municipalities like Manali, Kathivakkam, Sholinganallur, Alandur and Tiruvottiyur.

The proposal is pending before the CM and an announcement would be made in a few days. Presentations on setting up a new Tambaram and Avadi corporation were also discussed, a senior official who attended the meeting told Deccan Chronicle.

The setting up or expansion of corporations would become feasible only after the local bodies elections, in 2011. Municipal administration and water supply department secretary Niranjan Mardi and Chennai corporation commissioner Rajesh Lakhoni participated.

 

 

“Solid waste management is a challenge”

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The Hindu 24.09.2009

“Solid waste management is a challenge”

Staff Reporter

Exnora International discusses on social and technical expertise


TOUGH TASK: The Kanyakumari District Collector Rajendra Ratinoo addressing the workshop on Wednesday.

NAGERCOIL: The state-of-art method must be followed while implementing decentralized solid waste management in different parts of the district in order to enhance the social and technical capacity, said the Collector Rajendra Ratinoo.

Inaugurating the district level workshop on decentralized solid waste management here on Wednesday the Collector said that the implementation of solid waste management was a challenge to the authorities of civic bodies.

The successful implementation of this project in a particular panchayat or municipality would be a yardstick to judge the over all achievement in the developmental activities of the administration

The district administration had been recognising Executive Officer of those town panchayats, who had successfully implemented the project. Follow up action would be important to implement any scheme, said the Collector.

The Liaison officer of Exnora International, V.Ganapathy, while speaking about the issues of waste management in India said that the local bodies were ill equipped to meet the challenges of cleaning a town as the usual practice of land filling was no longer possible.

The increased quantity of incinerated plastic and bio-medical waste also made its management difficult. The objective of the workshop was to share the social and technical expertise identified by Exnora International to elected representatives, engineers and sanitary staff of local bodies and to understand opportunities and financial obligations for the implementation of the project and to plan a joint strategic action for improvements in city or town-wide sanitation.

The Assistant Director– in-charge of Town Panchayats, T.Balachandran, the Commissioner of Kulithalai Municipality, G.Dhanalakshmi, project, co-ordinator, Exnora International, T.Vijay Anand attended the workshop.

Last Updated on Thursday, 24 September 2009 04:29
 

Massive digging operation on roads troubles city residents

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The Hindu 24.09.2009

Massive digging operation on roads troubles city residents

Karthik Madhavan

Sources in the Corporation say mobile telephony companies are engaged in digging

– PHOTO: M. GOVARTHAN

Poor planning?: Almost all major roads in the city have either been dug or are being dug, which is causing road users a lot of problems.

ERODE: Roads in the city can broadly be divided in to two categories: dug and waiting to be dug.

This is because the digging operation is under way on a massive scale on almost all roads that warrant a mention in the 45-ward city.

Main roads, other roads that serve as bus routes, streets and by-lanes - not one is spared. Such is the scale of digging that it is impossible to move from one point to another in the city without riding or driving on a road that has not been dug or is under digging.

The digging, though necessary, hinders traffic flow on roads or streets that are too narrow to hold the ever-increasing traffic.

Take for example the Municipal Colony road that serves as the entry and exit to many housing colonies in the west of the city and also to residents of Manickampalayam.

The road, which sees heavy movement of two-wheelers, three-wheel and four-wheel goods carriers and mini buses, is undergoing digging.

One portion of the work is over and at the very stretch, the dug up earth has been too loosely placed to facilitate traffic. The result: vehicles, unable to use the dug side of road, jostle for space with vehicles coming from the opposite direction.

At Ganapathipuram, near the District Registrars office, off Cauvery Road, police have placed a barricade to divert vehicles proceeding towards Cauvery Road.

On the road that is supposed to take the diverted traffic, digging is going on. With very little space to manoeuvre, vehicle users are left wondering which way to proceed.

At Kalyana Sundaram Nagar, Chidambaram Colony, Raja Kadu, Majid Street, Agraharam Street the story is no different in that the same problem of narrow roads getting narrower persists everywhere.

This is because organisations engaged in digging do not close the pits well enough to facilitate traffic.

Sources in the Erode Municipal Corporation say mobile telephony companies Bharat Sanchar Nigam Ltd., Airtel, Aircel and Idea are engaged in digging operations.

BSNL has sought permission to dig 898 m, Airtel 350 m, Idea 1,768 m and Aircel 3,401 m. This is in addition to the civic body digging roads for laying water pipes. The sources say the Corporation is digging close to 23 km.

Asked about the massive digging operations, Corporation Commissioner B. Balachandran says the civic body has given digging permission at one go because all the works will get over at more or less the same time to facilitate easy flow of traffic across the city.

He adds that it has obtained 25 per cent of the digging cost as deposit from the telephone companies to ensure that they close the pits to facilitate traffic.

“If they do a shoddy work, they will have to forfeit the deposit,” he warns.

Last Updated on Thursday, 24 September 2009 04:26
 


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