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Tamil Nadu News Papers

Floodwater draining into sea will be tapped for city

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The Hindu              24.12.2013

Floodwater draining into sea will be tapped for city

K.Lakshmi

Telemetric river water level recorders will be installed

Soon a portion of floodwater that regularly gets drained into the sea could be saved to augment the city’s water supply.

The State Ground and Surface Water Resources Data Centre of Water Resources Department (WRD) will install telemetric river water level recorders in the five rivers falling in the Chennai region. These recorders, which will be fixed at points close to where the river meets the sea, will measure the water level.

Officials of the WRD’s Centre said that once floodwater crosses the point where the recorders are fixed, they will send alerts to engineers. It is then up to the engineers to make sure that the surplus floodwater is diverted to other waterbodies located upstream. By doing so, the water that otherwise gets washed out can be stored and used to augment supply for the city.

The department will fix the equipment near Nandambakkam along Adyar river, Vallur anicut along Kosasthalaiyar river, Lakshmipuram along Araniar river, Chetpet along Cooum river and Panangkattucheri close to Kalpakkam along Palar river.

Besides, the equipment will be installed on 44 sites across the State as part of the Rs.4-crore project.

Annually, a minimum of 1,000 million cubic feet of water, which translates to a month’s supply of drinking water for city, drains into sea through Adyar and Kosasthalaiyar rivers, an official informed.

The equipment will comprise a sensor to record water flow, a data logger that could store data for up to one year and a modem to transmit data to the monitoring room at Taramani and its website. A telemetric rain gauge that would provide data round-the-clock would also be installed. The project will be completed by May next.

 

Mixed bag for civic body

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Deccan Chronicle             20.12.2013 

Mixed bag for civic body

Chennai: It has been a good year for the Chennai corporation so far, thanks to the Amma Canteen, a pet project of chief minister Jayalalithaa launched early this year and gradually expanded across all 200 wards of the city corporation.

Yet, the civic body has failed on the development front. Several suburbs annexed to the corporation last year are still lagging behind without quality roads, drains and streetlights. Corporation officials should also thank the rain gods for the deficit rainfall, as the roads witnessed very little waterlogging this season.

In terms of public health, the corporation claimed that the incidence of cholera, dengue and malaria were low this year and Mayor Saidai S. Duraisamy also tabled a report, but the Opposition disputed this.

Demonstrations by residents and political parties were witnessed this year in the western suburbs including Ambattur and Maduravoyal, where residents had hoped that the merger with the civic body would improve the face of their locality.

“The situation of northern suburbs like Manali, Tiruvottiyur and Madhavaram is worse as even basic works like garbage collection and provision of streetlights remain the same,” says a professor of the Tamil Nadu Veterinary and Animal Sciences University.

“When compared to last year, the main roads are motorable in North Chennai, but interior roads still have potholes,” complained M. Basha, a resident Thiruvottiyur.

The quality of roads has improved in old areas of the city; for instance, interior roads in Adyar now have reflectors and wide painted platforms.

Similarly, road name boards in steel also add to the aesthetic look of roads, opines Karate R. Thiagarajan, former deputy mayor of Chennai. However the expanded areas of Chennai are yet to get their due importance and it would be good if the corporation follows an effective wireless communication system similar to that of police, so that the city’s civic woes can be addressed in a effective manner, he adds.

Garbage has always been a problem in the city and the concept of source segregation of waste is yet to be implemented by the Chennai corporation.

Adequate dustbins are not there in areas like Kodambakkam and Mambalam which are thickly populated with large flat complexes, rues R. Govindaraj, joint general secretary of Exnora International.

Road signboards are now bright and colourful, but interior roads need to be re-laid fully after reducing height by scraping a few layers as many flats get flooded after a few spells of rain, he adds.

 

Unauthorised OFCs must be declared by tomorrow

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The Hindu             20.12.2013 

Unauthorised OFCs must be declared by tomorrow

As per the OFC committee's report, only 7,500 km of 65,000 km of cables are authorised in the city.
As per the OFC committee's report, only 7,500 km of 65,000 km of cables are authorised in the city.

Telecom service providers have been given time till Saturday to declare optical fibre cables (OFCs) laid without authorisation across the city. If they fail to do so, the Bruhat Bangalore Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) will take ownership of these cables and either disconnect them or auction them, said N.R. Ramesh, OFC committee member and Yediyur councillor.

Undeclared overhead cables of the various Internet service providers would be disconnected after January 1, as per instructions of the BBMP Commissioner, he added.

The councillor told presspersons here on Thursday that the committee had found that of the 65,000 km of cables laid in the city, only around 7,500 km were authorised. BBMP has dug pits in 771 places across the city to verify the extent of violations in laying OFCs, he said.

Fee agreement

After a series of meetings with chief executive officers of 31 service providers, including 17 telecom service providers, the BBMP and the companies agreed to fixing the right of way fee to lay cables at Rs. 850 a metre. Unauthorised cables that have already been laid may be regularised by paying penalty of Rs. 600 a metre along with the Rs. 850 a metre fee, Mr. Ramesh said.

The BBMP would soon sign a memorandum of understanding regarding the payment of right of way fees. “This is likely to bring in at least Rs. 400 crore revenue to the BBMP in the next three or four months,” he claimed.

Digging up roads

According to Mr. Ramesh, road cutting permissions have now been made transparent, with the entire process being computerised. Service providers have to apply online and make payments via online bank transfer. As many as 33 banks have been roped in.

“The software [developed for the process] is GIS enabled and permissions will be given only after the spots are inspected by engineers. The companies will have to restore the road after the cables are laid,” he said.

He added that permission would not be granted if the road had been asphalted less than a year ago. The same criterion would apply to other civic agencies that need to dig up roads, including Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage Board and Bangalore Electricity Supply Company, and Bharat Sanchar Nigam Ltd. “We may grant them some concession as these agencies provide essential services,” he said.

 


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