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PMC conducts drive against encroachments

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The Times of India 08.09.2009

PMC conducts drive against encroachments

PUNE: The Pune Municipal Corporation conducted anti-encroachment drives on Monday at different places in the city, including Wagdaon Dhayri, the slums opposite Shivajinagar court, Vishrambaugwada area and on Pune-Solapur road.

The civic body has sent notices to all those living in unauthorised dwellings before conducting drives.

About 4,500 square feet area was cleared in Wadgaon Dhayri, where the land was reserved for bio-diversity parks.

Four pucca' constructions were razed during the drive on Monday. Two JCBs, 10 police personnel and more than 20 labourers were deployed at the site.

Municipal commissioner Mahesh Zagade had issued orders to all officers to initiate action against unauthorised constructions as per the Maharashtra Regional and Town Planning Act.

Zagade has ordered ward officers to take sustained action and to jointly conduct drives with two or more ward offices so that the unauthorised constructions don't come up again.

 

Bambolim school complex to get garbage, sewerage plants

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The Times of India 08.09.2009

Bambolim school complex to get garbage, sewerage plants

PANAJI: Education minister Babush Monserrate has said that the integrated school complex planned at Cujira in Bambolim will get its independent garbage and sewerage treatment plants.

Monserrate had announced recently that two major organisations Dempo charitable trust and Alcon constructions have volunteered to develop the integrated school complex at their own cost of approximately Rs five crore and that the work was already in progress. The garbage and sewerage treatment plants will also be built by these organisations for the complex.

The integrated school complex is being planned to shift Panaji schools to ease congestion in the capital city during school hours. Also, the complex will provide students will facilities such as playground etc which are not available to them as schools are located in city area where there is a lack of space.

A total of 1.13 lakh sq m has already been acquired by the state government and marked for the purpose at Cujira in Bambolim. As the education minister has decided to increase the allocation of land to each school to 10,000 sq m from the previous 5,000 sq m, the Directorate of Education (DoE) is in the process of acquiring more land for the complex.

Efforts to acquire the neighbouring land owned by the Goa Medical College and hospital at the moment has already begun, sources informed. Two large playgrounds, a gymnasium, a common hall, a hi-tech laboratory and parking facility will also be built at the complex. All these facilities along with the internal roads will be provided by the Dempo and Alcon groups at the cost of Rs five crore.

With five to six schools placed in close proximity, a substantial amount of garbage and sewage will be generated at the complex. Therefore, a garbage treatment plant will also be set up to treat the waste and an independent sewerage treatment plant is also in the offing for the complex.

The financial support offered by the two organisations has been accepted to avoid the work on the complex from being delayed pending approval of government grants, the education minister clarified recently. The two organisations have discussed the proposal and the developmental works involved with the education minister and have submitted a letter to the government expressing their willingness to bear a cost of Rs five crore to develop facilities for the complex, sources said.

Five schools have been shortlisted to be allotted land in the complex. Each school will be provided 10,000 sq m of land each and the school managing committee will have to themselves construct buildings for the school. The education department will also offer loans for the purpose. Dempo college of arts and science will also be provided land in the complex as it is also located in a congested area in the capital city.
 

Harvesting rain: State to act

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Deccan Chronicle 08.09.2009

Harvesting rain: State to act

September 8th, 2009
By Our Correspondent

Bengaluru, Sept. 7: With impending climactic catastrophes, the city is keen to make its citizens adopt the rainwater harvesting system. To this effect, the new Rainwater Harvesting Act has amended the conditions required to extend the Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage Board (BWSSB) connection for existing buildings on sites measuring 60x40 and above. As per the act passed on August 17, the buildings will have to mandatorily make provisions for rainwater harvesting within nine months to retain the connection. Earlier, only new buildings to be constructed on sites with dimensions more than 30x60 needed to adopt the rainwater harvesting system.

At present, only one per cent of the total properties in Bengaluru – a mere 16,000 buildings – have rainwater harvesting structures. BWSSB meets the water requirements of 40 to 45 per cent of the city covering 300 sq km out of 800.29 sq km. Though the city faces a shortage of 255 million litres per day (MLD), only one per cent of 3000 MLD of rainwater is utilised every year. 43 per cent, that is 408 mld of water, supplied by BWSSB is ‘unaccounted for’ due to leakage and 20 per cent of the borewells in the city have gone dry. 80 per cent of the ground water in the city is also contaminated with nitrates and fluorides, along with chromium, lead, aluminum, copper and bacteria.

The 11-member committee formed by BWSSB is headed by chief engineer Kemparamaiah and comprises rainwater harvesting experts A.R. Shivakumar, executive secretary of Karnataka State Council for Science and Technology, Indian Institute of Science, Vishwanath, advisor to ‘Arghyam’, and retired commissioner of ground water resources commission Ramasheshan and eight other BWSSB officials. They will formulate regulations for the implementation of the act in the city. The committee has already had six meetings and is working out strategies to make the regulations more feasible for the implementation. The committee also visited Chennai, where the act had been implemented earlier, to study the challenges faced. Speaking to Deccan Chronicle, Mr Vishwanath, said, “We will submit the report this weekend. We also plan to educate those who fail to adopt the rainwater harvesting system, rather than ordering penalties in the initial phase. While construction of recharge structures for harvesting rainwater and recharging ground water at road intersection points and flyovers are a part of the approach, the focus of the legislation is mainly towards those homes and apartments which have a BWSSB connection.” Once the report is furnished, BWSSB intends to conduct a poll to make the act people-friendly before it is printed in the gazette. The regulation will be implemented a month after that, BWSSB sources said.

 


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