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Tamil Nadu News Papers

Vellore Corporation Goes Hi-tech for Streetlight Upkeep

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The New Indian Express             01.02.2014 

Vellore Corporation Goes Hi-tech for Streetlight Upkeep

The Vellore Corporation is set to introduce a high-tech system to monitor and maintain streetlights.

In the next couple of weeks, a Geographic Information System (GIS) to monitor streetlight would be implemented as a public-private partnership project at an estimated cost of `8 crore.

The project aims at cutting down the power consumption and improve the efficiency of monitoring and maintenance.

Corporation Engineer A P Baskaran said the new system, among facilitating other things, would help the Corporation in getting immediate feeedback about the performance of the streetlights,

This would help cut down the power consumption and the electricity bills by at least 40 per cent, he added. 

The Corporation presently has around 17,726 streetlights within the city limit.

A Coimbatore-based company had conducted a study on the wastage of illumination, pole placement, lighting ambience and replacing the current lighting pattern with advanced LED/CFL lighting system, covering all parts of the city in the past two months and had  come up with a report.

The company analysed also the lighting pattern and the electricity consumption in the last three years, that was taken as the baseline for the study.

This report would be validated by a third party and the project would be implemented in the next couple of weeks, Baskaran said.

“It may be completed in the next three or four months,” noted the Corporation Engineer.

Once the project is implemented, the entire streetlights could be monitored by a team of professionals from the company working on a contract basis for the next 10 years.

They would be provided with vehicles and uniforms by the Corporation.

Complaints about the street lights would be addressed instantly as the entire street lighting could be monitored by the Corporation online.

 

No more deepening of borewells beyond a point: Mayor

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The Hindu              01.02.2014

No more deepening of borewells beyond a point: Mayor

Mayor P. Karthiyayini making a point at the meeting of Corporation Council in Vellore on Friday. Janaki, Commissioner, is in the picture.— Photo: C. Venkatachalapathy
Mayor P. Karthiyayini making a point at the meeting of Corporation Council in Vellore on Friday. Janaki, Commissioner, is in the picture.— Photo: C. Venkatachalapathy

Even as the severe water scarcity which is gripping different parts of Vellore dominated the proceedings of the monthly ordinary meeting of the Vellore Corporation Council here on Friday, Vellore Mayor P. Karthiyayini indicated that the Corporation had decided against the practice of drilling new public borewells or deepening existing borewells beyond the depth at which water is available.

The Mayor made the statement in response to the demand from various councillors for deepening borewells wherever the groundwater table had depleted. She said that the drilling of new borewells or deepening of existing borewells beyond the depth at which water is available would lead to the depletion of groundwater in that area as well as in the vicinity, leading to greater water scarcity. Therefore, wherever the Corporation’s borewells have gone dry, the Corporation has decided to construct sumps or install high density poly-ethylene (HDPE) tanks and fill them with water transported through the Corporation’s water tankers.

S. Raja (DMK), 38th ward member objected to the proposal of linking the Ponnai scheme with the Allapuram-Thorappadi Combined Drinking Water Scheme under which water is supplied to the added areas of Allapuram and Thorappadi (erstwhile town panchayats), since Vellore is reeling under water scarcity.

Janaki, Commissioner of the Corporation said that it was not proper on the part of councillors to object to the linking of the Ponnai scheme to the pipelines supplying water to Allapuram and Thorappadi since these two erstwhile town panchayats have been annexed with Vellore Corporation and they too were reeling under water scarcity. Vellore Corporation is dependent on water supplied from the head works in Eraivankadu, a village which is outside the jurisdiction of Vellore Corporation. Vellore would not get water if the people of Eraivankadu object to the supply of water from their village to Vellore, she said.

K. Sooryachari (AIADMK), 41st ward member, said that though the Mayor instructed the various zonal committees to supply water through tractors, so far, the supply has not been effected. Besides, tenders have not been floated for works with estimates of up to Rs. 5 lakh, which the zonal committees were empowered to undertake. These works should be expedited, he said.

M. Usha Nandini (AIADMK), 54th ward member, said that water was being supplied only once in 15 days in Kaspa area. K. Sukumar (AIADMK), 49th ward member, said that there were three open wells and three borewells having water yield in the Thorappadi lake, but water was not being pumped regularly from these sources since only one operator was available for Thorappadi. Baskaran, Corporation Engineer said that an additional operator has been posted in Thorappadi.

Mr. Sukumar said that there were several areas in his ward which did not have pipelines connected to the water supply scheme. Since the borewells in the houses have dried up, the residents were suffering from severe water scarcity. S. Vijayalakshmi (DMK), 12th ward member, said that it is more than 15 days since water was supplied to her ward. She wanted the ‘veli kathan’ trees in the vacant sites of the Corporation in East Gandhinagar to be removed in order to conserve the groundwater.

The Mayor said that the work on the Cauvery Water Supply Scheme under which water is to be transported from Cauvery River near Mettur to Vellore district is making rapid progress, and that the scheme was likely to be completed in another six months.

Till then, the existing water supply would be streamlined, she said.

 

Corporation launches intensive tax collection drive

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The Hindu              01.02.2014

Corporation launches intensive tax collection drive

Special Correspondent

The Tiruchirapalli City Corporation has launched an intensive tax collection drive which will continue till February end.

As per the Tiruchi Corporation Act, the residents should pay the property tax for every six months and it should be submitted within 15 days of the beginning of the half year period. The water tax should be paid once in three months, corporation commissioner V.P. Thandapani said on Friday.

Residents can pay the property tax, water tax, underground drainage service charge, and professional tax pending for the first and second half of 2013-14 at the service centres functioning in the corporation zonal offices at the Golden Rock, K. Abishekapuram, Srirangam, and Ariyamangalam, and the tax collection centres at the ward offices at Ariyamangalam , Thanjavur Road, Viragupettai water tank, Subramaniapuram ward office, Melakalkandarkottai , K.K. Nagar , Kallatheru ward office, Nandhikoil , Devar hall, and Tiruverumbur ward office. All these centres would function from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. on all working days and from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Sundays till February 28, Mr. Thandapani said in a release.

 


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