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Rainwater harvesting to be mandatory in Bangalore

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The Hindu 24.07.2009

Rainwater harvesting to be mandatory in Bangalore

Special Correspondent

Assembly passes Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage (Amendment) Bill 2009

 


Tamil Nadu has already made rainwater harvesting compulsory across that State

Owners of buildings who fail to install such structures will be penalised


Bangalore: Rainwater harvesting has been made mandatory in the Bangalore agglomeration with the Legislative Assembly on Thursday giving its approval to the Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage (Amendment) Bill 2009.

Rainwater harvesting in Bangalore will be compulsory nine months after the legislation takes effect.

Owners of existing buildings who fail to install a rainwater harvesting structure will be penalised. The BWSSB will install the structure and recover the cost from the owner or the tenant of the building as the case may be. For buildings on smaller sital areas, the Government is contemplating bringing forth community rainwater harvesting, although that is not part of the legislation that was ratified by the House.

Minister for BWSSB and Information Technology, Katta Subramanya Naidu, who piloted the Bill, said rainwater harvesting would be compulsory for all residential, commercial and industrial premises. While it would be applicable for all new structures constructed on a sital area measuring 1,200 sq ft and above (should be incorporated in the building plan), in the case of the existing structures it will be applicable for those built on a sital area of 2,400 sq ft and above.

The entire Opposition lauded the Government for bringing forth the Bill. As Minister for Law and Parliamentary Affairs, S. Suresh Kumar, put it “all of us know the cost of water but not the value of water. It is time we bring in measures to harvest rainwater which will also help in improving the water table. Two decades ago, underground water was available at around 150 ft in Bangalore and today it is around 700 ft.”

As per the amendment “every owner shall provide for a rainwater harvesting structure within nine months from the date of implementation of the Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage (Amendment) Act 2009 in a building having a sital area of not less than 1,200 sq ft in such a manner with such conditions as may be provided in the regulations, failing which the board may cause such rainwater harvesting structure and recover the cost from the owner or occupier as arrears of land revenue as the case may be. It is considered necessary to provide for making it mandatory to build rainwater harvesting structures by households in order to preserve the groundwater”.

With reference to the suggestions of the Opposition that the Government should choose to amend the Karnataka Municipalities Act and the Karnataka Municipal Corporation Act to ensure that rainwater harvesting was compulsory across the State, Mr. Suresh Kumar said the Government wound amend the two Acts in the near future. Tamil Nadu had already made rainwater harvesting compulsory across that State and “we will also follow suit”.

Mr. Naidu said the BWSSB authorities were finding it difficult to supply drinking water to all residents although efforts were afoot to make available as much water as possible. The formation of the Bruhat Bangalore Mahanagara Palike with the addition of a number of adjoining villages apart from seven city municipal councils and a town municipal council had compounded the problem.

He said the BWSSB would shortly commission a rainwater theme park at Jayanagar and building owners could visit the park to learn on the various types of rainwater harvesting structures that could be installed. The BWSSB would also publish and circulate booklets on the rainwater harvesting systems.

Last Updated on Friday, 24 July 2009 05:33
 

Town Planning staff clear encroachments

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The Hindu 24.07.2009

Town Planning staff clear encroachments

Staff Reporter

Municipal Commissioner leads from the front

 


Cellars should be used for parking only: Sridhar

Three eateries in cellar asked to vacate


VISAKHAPATNAM: Cracking the whip on encroachers, Town Planning staff on Thursday removed several encroachments on the arterial Dwarakanagar-Gurudwara road.

Municipal Commissioner B. Sridhar, who personally supervised the drive, said that cellars must be used for parking and should be not be misused for commercial activity or as godowns.

He said shops would be seized if encroachments in the cellars and on the footpaths were not removed. Some shop owners volunteered to remove them. The Commissioner said removal of encroachments would not only lead to smooth movement of traffic but prevent accidents. In tune with the decision, officials got removed plywood partitioning and gate in the cellar of a big textile showroom. The management was told to use the cellar for in-house and customer parking and not to encroach upon the pavement. At another commercial complex, walls and shutters in the cellar were removed.

Three popular eateries at Dwarakanagar Junction being run in the cellar were asked to vacate. Seeing the unhygienic conditions and the dumping of left over food and other garbage at a dhaba there, Mr. Sridhar instructed the Chief Medical Officer (Health) to take action.

Officials got removed projection of shops, advertisement hoarding set up at shops as well as blockings erected by using gas-cutters.

Kiosks set up encroaching upon the road were removed.

Not using cellars for parking has been leading to traffic bottlenecks as vehicles are parked on the roadside. The situation is much worse at Daba Gardens in the stretch between Ambedkar Statue and P.E.N. School

Chief City Planner G.V. Raghu, ACP (Demolition) A. Srinivas and ACP Zone A. Lakshmana Rao participated.

Last Updated on Friday, 24 July 2009 05:31
 

Guntur Municipal Corporation to take up road widening

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The Hindu 24.07.2009

Guntur Municipal Corporation to take up road widening

Special Correspondent

Massive greening project on the anvil

GUNTUR: Guntur Municipal Corporation will take up clearing up of all encroachments by road side very soon to take up a project of constructing footpaths with the financial assistance of Vijayawada Guntur Mangalagiri Tenali Urban Development Authority with a Rs.5 crore layout.

This project will help the Corporation provide better carriageway for vehicles and a space for pedestrians to walk on main roads or bylanes in the city, said Municipal Commissioner K. Illambarthi. Talking to The Hindu, he hoped to launch the project some time in August and similarly on agenda was widening at least three major roads in Guntur. Butchaiahthota first lane, which was pending for widening would be taken up within 10 days, with the Indian Railways providing some land for accomplishing this task. The Railways had constructed a new wall within its land proposes to take away debris of the old wall to pave way for the GMC contractors to lay a widened road. This would provide a better connectivity to Vijayawada approach road from the city. Two other roads to be widened immediately are Srinivasa Kalyana Mandapam Road from Bus stand and JKC College Road to 80 feet.

The JKC College road widening works would be taken up with 75 per cent finance from the VGTMUDA as it connects the proposed Outer Ring Road of the Urban Development Authority to lead to Autonagar. In the next five days the GMC proposes to take up a massive city greening project by involving the stake holders, creating user communities, seedlings supplied by the AP Social Forestry Corporation. About 1.15 lakh saplings would be planted in all amenable/conducive areas and the Social Forestry people in association with user communities would look after the protection and growth of saplings for three years.

Drinking water

All possible efforts were being made to bring Guntur under the Jawahar Lal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission (JNNURM) and it could be reality very soon with Warangal also likely to get the nod for implementing the projects under this scheme. Meanwhile, over Rs.600 crore would flow into Guntur Municipal corporation under the Urban Infrastructure Development Scheme for Small and Medium Towns (UIDSSMT) by October for drinking water and underground drainage schemes to be implemented with the help of World Bank.

The NHAI had begun the land acquisition process for laying the second water pipeline from Guntur Channel to Thakellapadu, the Commissioner added.

Last Updated on Friday, 24 July 2009 05:27
 


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