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Dog population increasing, but MC has limited options

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The Times of India 25.08.2009

Dog population increasing, but MC has limited options

CHANDIGARH: Returning home from duty at a call centre in Mohali on a two-wheeler on Tuesday night, two youths were hounded by a pack of stray dogs near Beant Singh Memorial Complex, Sector 42. While the scared boys tried their best to dodge the canines, they could not avoid the dog bites. This doesn’t happen to be the solitary case of dog attack in recent days. A week ago, an elderly couple, while taking their morning stroll in a Sector-36 park, was chased by canines.

While a number of complaints of stray dog attacks have been pouring in from different parts of the city, municipal authorities have not been able to control the situation. According to an estimate, the dog population has reached between 8,000-10,000. Admitting that ‘the situation has spiralled out of control’, a member of the minicipal corporation’s sanitation committee, AP Sanwaria, said, ‘The Supreme Court’s directive does not allow killing of canines and the much-publicised dog pound hasn?t been built as yet.’

Stressing that the only way to arrest the exploding population was to undertake sterilization programmes at a regular interval, Sanwaria revealed, ‘We have floated a tender to invite sterilization experts from private agencies so that the much-delayed work could begin again. We have kept aside a budget amount of Rs 10 lakh for this.’ But sounding apprehensive, he continued, ‘Frankly speaking, there seem to be very few options at hand. It is a long-drawn process as you cannot sterilize more than 10 dogs in a day.’

Meanwhile, his concern does not seem baseless as inquiries by The Times of India revealed that the MC health authorities’ sterilization programme that was initiated last year, flopped. A source in the department said, ‘We had engaged a number of animal bodies working in the city but they could not proceed beyond sterilizing 2,000 dogs’.

Taking up the issue of dog pounds, Sanwaria added, ‘After sterilization, the dogs are to be left at their take-away site. The upcoming dog pound will have a capacity for only around 700 canines and that too, of the ferocious kind.’ In this respect, MC’s sanitation committee chairman Chander Mukhi Sharma said, ‘We have just been allotted two acres in Sector 25.’ He assured, ‘We will try to build the pound quickly.’
 

Garbage plant: MC finally writes to company

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The Times of India 25.08.2009

Garbage plant: MC finally writes to company

CHANDIGARH: Municipal corporation commissioner Roshan Sunkaria on Monday finally issued written orders to Jai Parkash Associates for not managing waste at the garbage plant at Dadumajra properly, which had led to foul smell veiling almost the whole city.

Confirming this, Sunkaria divulged that they have issued strict instructions to the company against burning of RDF in the garbage processing plant, which has caused great inconvenience to residents of most sectors of the city. ‘We would initiate strict action against the processing company if they fail to abide by the norms set in the mutually-signed memorandum of understanding (MoU). We, along with scientists from the UT Pollution Control Board, have been monitoring the proceedings there on a daily basis.’ It may be recalled here that residents have been complaining of stench coming out from the Dadumajra garbage processing plant for the past about a week.

Public outcry over this had compelled mayor Kamlesh, former mayors Subhash Chawla and Pardeep Chhabra and many other councillors to rush to the garbage plant site to have an on-the-spot inspection of the ongoing proceedings.

Team submits report to FS

A high level committee of technicians and environmental officials on Monday submitted its report to finance secretary (FS) Sanjay Kumar. Besides, a central team would visit the plant this week. Though committee officials were yet to reveal the report details, sources in the UT administration divulged that the report confirmed that the stink originated from the plant but reasoned that it might have been due to high moisture content in the air.

 

Rs 5000cr redevelopment project up for grabs in Bandra

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The Times of India 25.08.2009

Rs 5000cr redevelopment project up for grabs in Bandra

MUMBAI: Close on the heels of the Mantralaya redevelopment project, another massive redevelopment plan in the western suburbs is expected to be pushed through by the government soon. TOI has learnt through highly reliable Mantralaya sources that three builders have emerged as the frontrunners for the 100-acre project to redevelop the PWD-built quarters for state government staff in Bandra east, located around the suburban collector's office.

According to these sources, the leading contenders for this lucrative project-estimated by PWD chief engineer S B Tamsekar as worth Rs 5,000 crore-are DB Realty, Kakade Infrastructure and Akruti.

DB Realty is a company formed just a couple of years ago by Vinod Goenka of Conwood Group and Shahid Balwa of Balwas Group. This company has often been described in industry circles as among the biggest emerging real estate firms in Mumbai and surrounding areas. Kakade Infrastructure is a firm headed by Pune-based builder Sanjay Kakade, who has bagged several big government projects in the past. Akruti is a Mumbai-based construction company headed by Vimal Shah and became known mainly because its involvement in various slum rehabilitation projects in the city.

Tamsekar said the state government's cabinet committee on infrastructure headed by chief minister Ashok Chavan will soon take a decision on awarding the project. He added fewer than five firms had been "short-listed''. The fourth company on the list is Man Infrastructure. Early this year, the infrastructure committee, which includes deputy chief minister Chhagan Bhujbal, water resources minister Ajit Pawar, finance minister Dilip Walse-Patil, transport minister Surupsingh Naik and MSRDC minister Vimal Mundada, decided to trifurcate the project. This is because the committee felt no single developer could handle such a huge project. Each of the three components is worth over Rs 1,500 crore. The developer has to quote a minimum of Rs 440 crore upfront for upkeep and maintenance of the new buildings.

But like the Mantralaya redevelopment project, several builders have complained in private that the tender for the PWD redevelopment project was not widely publicised. A former office-bearer of the powerful Maharashtra Chamber of Housing Industry-which represents top builders-told TOI that the tenders were selectively given to some firms. "We were asked to meet certain politicians if we were interested in the project,'' he alleged. It is learnt that a Kandivali-based developer had written to various departments in Mantralaya, seeking information about this project. "He received no reply,'' said this builder's colleague.

The PWD colony currently has almost 5,000 flats in ground-plus-three storey buildings. It was built between 1958 and 1968. According to the plan, the successful bidders will have to redevelop the residential buildings and construct shopping complexes, gardens, schools and recreational grounds. The project also envisages construction of a super-speciality government hospital as well as an 8-lakh sq ft administrative building as large as the Mantralaya. There would also be a community hall, a club house and shopping arcade. Developers are expected to get over 20 acres to exploit and earn profits from. Situated along the Western Express Highway in close proximity to the commercial hub of BKC, it is a plot developers have for long been vying for.
 


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