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Suvidha Kendras taking the schemes and benefits within the reach of the urban poor

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The Hindu - Delhi 14.08.2009

Suvidha Kendras taking the schemes and benefits within the reach of the urban poor

Urvashi Sarkar

 


70 NGOs enlisted to survey areas of the Capital


NEW DELHI: Sixty-two-year-old Jhinkan Prasad has come to Mahila Vikas Sansthan, a Naraina-based non-government organisation here in the Capital, to apply for old age pension.

The NGO has been demarcated as a Suvidha Kendra and a Gender Resource Centre by the Delhi Government as part of its Mission Convergence programme launched in 2008.

“As a Suvidha Kendra, it is a site of single-window clearance where the poor can apply for schemes and benefits they are entitled to. A Gender Resource Centre is where women below the poverty line come for courses in vocational training, legal aid, knowledge on nutrition and health care, formation of self-help groups and non-formal education free of cost,” says Shyamala Shiveshwarkar, consultant with the Centre for Advocacy and Research.

Those who finish the courses receive diplomas awarded by the Union Government.

The Mission Convergence programme was launched to place schemes and benefits within the reach of the urban poor in the Capital.

“For this purpose, the Delhi Government enlisted 70 NGOs which sent their outreach workers to survey areas of the Capital door-to-door. The NGOs came up with a list of 40 lakh individuals who were classified as below poverty line.” says Ms. Shiveshwarkar.

The classification took place on the basis of place of residence, people who are socially vulnerable and those who are occupationally vulnerable.

“The outreach workers explained to the people the concept of GRCs and SKs and told them about the single form to be filled even if they were entitled to benefits from several schemes. The people were informed about GRCs in their neighbourhoods,” adds Ms. Shiveshwarkar.

Individuals like Jhinkan Prasad learnt about GRCs from people who visited his house during the survey.

He displays a piece of paper with his details on it and also the name of the survey worker who met him.

Mission Convergence director Rashmi Singh says: “The BPL classification has been expanded to include vulnerable categories instead of limiting it to classification based on income. The programme is still in a transitional stage, services have to be directly carried to the people and there may be objections to change in the traditional systems of delivery mechanisms. Five lakh women have already benefited from GRCs.”

Girja Kumari Sahu, who works with the District Resource Centre, South, adds: “At present GRCs are equipped to help individuals in applying for five-seven specific schemes as decided by those in charge of Mission Convergence. The aim is to enable GRCs to deliver the benefits of above 40 schemes.”

The programme also aims to provide those who have been identified in the survey with biometric cards. These cards will serve multiple functions including identity proof. The 78 operational GRCs-SKs, which are being pitched as the face of the Government at the community level, are the main interface between the two.

Dr. Gyanendra Kumar, executive director of Mahila Vikas Sansthan, says: “When people come to the SK to apply for schemes they are entitled to, they have to submit the self-attested application form, details of their bank account and statement, affidavit and residence proof. These forms are then sent to the District Resource Centre and finally the Department of Social Welfare.”

Last Updated on Friday, 14 August 2009 07:33
 

VMC bags National Urban Water Award

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The Hindu - Andhra Pradesh 14.08.2009

VMC bags National Urban Water Award


Vijayawada Mayor M.V. Ratna Bindu (third from right in the front row) seen along with other winners of the National Urban Water Awards, 2009, presented by President Pratibha Devisingh Patil in New Delhi on Thursday.

VIJAYAWADA: The Vijayawada Municipal Corporation (VMC) bagged second prize in the ‘National Urban Water Awards 2009’ presented in New Delhi on Thursday.

President Pratibha Devisingh Patil handed over the prize to Mayor M.V. Ratna Bindu and Municipal Commissioner P.S. Pradyumna at a function in the national capital. Union Urban Development Minister S. Jaipal Reddy was also present.

The VMC secured second prize in the ‘Services to the Poor’ category, for its efforts in “providing subsidies and incentives for water supply to the urban poor” through reduced water connection charges and monthly tariff as well as de-linking of water services to land tenure.

Last Updated on Friday, 14 August 2009 05:15
 

Groundwater vanishing in North India, says NASA

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The Hindu 14.08.2009

Groundwater vanishing in North India, says NASA

Staff Reporter

BANGALORE: Groundwater levels in Punjab, Rajasthan, Haryana and Delhi are falling dramatically — by one foot a year — a trend that could lead to “extensive socio-economic stresses” for the region’s 114 million residents, says a scientific paper based on the U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration’s satellite imagery.

A staggering 109 cubic km of groundwater has been lost in just six years (2002-08) — a figure twice the capacity of India’s largest surface reservoir Upper Wainganga and “much more” than the government’s estimation, says the paper published in the latest issue of international journal Nature.

The depletion is caused entirely by human activity such as irrigation, and not natural climatic variability, concludes the study co-authored by Matthew Rodell, a hydrologist with NASA. Groundwater is being pumped out faster than it is being replenished.

The finding is based on images from NASA’s Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE), a pair of satellites that sense changes in Earth’s gravity field and associated mass distribution, including water masses stored above or below the Earth’s surface.

Between August 2002 and October 2008, the region lost 109 cubic km of groundwater, almost triple the capacity of the largest man-made reservoir in the U.S., Lake Mead. If measures are not taken to ensure sustainable groundwater use, consequences may include collapse of agricultural output and severe shortages of potable water, said Professor Rodell.

Depletion is likely to continue until effective measures are taken to curb groundwater demand which could propel severe shortages of potable water, reduced agricultural productivity, conflict and suffering, the research paper added. Rajasthan, Punjab, Haryana and Delhi are semi-arid or arid. The region has benefited from the Green Revolution “fuelled largely by increased production of groundwater for irrigation.”

Last Updated on Friday, 14 August 2009 04:42
 


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