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Tamil Nadu News Papers

‘Cleanliness to be given priority’

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The Hindu             26.11.2013

‘Cleanliness to be given priority’

Staff Reporter

At a meeting held on Monday to discuss cleanliness in the city, Corporation Commissioner Kiran Gurrala said that keeping the city clean would be top on the priorities of the sanitation department.

According to a release, Mr. Gurrala said that the sanitation wing should make full use of the walkie-talkies that they had been provided with. He said that the sanitation department officials and the zonal commissioners should have ward-wise details about the conservancy workers, vehicles such as cleaning lorries and the number of dustbins on a daily basis.

He also said that roadside shops and tea shops should be instructed not to litter and to use the dustbins placed on the road. He added that violators would be fined. Mr Gurrala said that the Vaigai river bank and the area around the river should also be kept clean, according to the release.

Zone 4 office inspected

The Corporation Commissioner inspected the Corporation Zone 4 office on Monday. The information centre, income section, engineering section, economic census section and urban housing section were also inspected by the Commissioner, a release said.

He enquired about the daily collection of taxes.

 

More Wards to come under zero waste management project

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The Hindu             26.11.2013

More Wards to come under zero waste management project

Residents of four more Wards will have to pay attention to the way they treat waste as the Coimbatore Corporation plans a waste segregation project.– Photo: M. Periasamy
Residents of four more Wards will have to pay attention to the way they treat waste as the Coimbatore Corporation plans a waste segregation project.– Photo: M. Periasamy

On Tuesday, the Coimbatore Corporation officials led by Commissioner G. Latha will hold a meeting with Councillors Venthamarai Balu (Ward 44), S.J. Ashok Kumar (Ward 51), M. Malarvizhi (Ward 67), and S.K. Nijaam (Ward 98) to discuss ways to implement the zero waste management project.

The discussion will be based on the experience the civic body gained in implementing the project in association with ICLEI, an NGO, Residents Awareness Association of Coimbatore (RAAC), Siruthuli, ITC, and a few other organisations in Ward 23 (R.S. Puram).

The civic body and the organisations created awareness among residents of Ward 23 on the need to segregate waste into wet and dry, distributed bins and bags and then taught the residents ways to segregate the waste.

The ICLEI-funded scheme ‘Shunya — zero waste management project’ saw the residents segregate waste, and the conservancy workers of the area sell off the recyclable waste to the ITC.

R. Raveendran, Honorary Secretary, RAAC, said that the workers had collected nearly five tonnes plastic and of those one or two workers had done exceedingly well in that they had earned hundreds by selling the waste to the ITC.

Now the corporation would be extending the project minus ICLEI support to the four Wards.

The corporation had had a discussion with the assistant commissioners and other officials of all the five Wards on Saturday last. It had decided to meet the Councillors of the four Wards to enlist their support and discuss modalities to extend the scheme, said Commissioner G. Latha.

By this week, the corporation officials, Councillors and conservancy workers would go campaigning door-to-door asking residents to segregate waste. After they begin segregating the waste, the officials-workers team would follow up to ensure that the residents segregated the right way. If they failed to segregate the waste, the corporation would be forced to serve notices on residents, said the Commissioner.

In Ward 23, the corporation was in the process of talking to owners of commercial establishments to follow the waste segregation system. It was in the process of setting up the bio-gas plant to treat wet waste and placing red bins to dump sanitary napkins and other wastes that did not come under the wet and dry waste category.

 

Corporation gets software to manage civic issues

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The Hindu             26.11.2013

Corporation gets software to manage civic issues

Aloysius Xavier Lopez

The Chennai Corporation will commission a comprehensive digital dashboard to manage civic issues using real-time data.

The civic body has initiated talks with organisations such as IBM, SAP and Oracle to put in place the digital dashboard, a single screen displaying problem areas in civic preparedness.

“It is a kind of abstract of the entire operations of the Chennai Corporation. It will be a single screen pointing to the problem areas we should concentrate on, on a particular day,” said an official of the Corporation.

A public grievance dashboard, for example, may show key performance indicators related to resolution of civic issues in real time. Similarly, a civic development works’ dashboard will show key performance indicators relating to roads, bridges, footpaths, parks, playgrounds, streetlights, hospitals and stormwater drains developed by Chennai Corporation.

The official can go down to the last detail to take specific action in real time. “The digital dashboard will provide analysis in a simplified manner. More than 95 per cent of the decisions of the civic body will be made based on information from the dashboard. It is more of a proactive than reactive approach,” said the official.

The existing modules cover property tax management system, works management system, personnel information and pay roll management system, public grievance redress management system, asset management system, and trade licences, among others.

 


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