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Garbage piles up in Thrissur

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The Hindu 21.07.2009

Garbage piles up in Thrissur

Staff Reporter

Lalur residents block dumping of waste in their area

PHOTO: K. K. Najeeb

IMPENDING DISASTER: Huge mounds of garbage remaining uncleared at the Sakthan Thamburan Market in Thrissur on Monday. —

Thrisur: Mounds of garbage piled up in every street corner have turned the city into a huge garbage dump leaving a stench at every place.

Residents of Lalur, the Corporation’s waste disposal site, blocked dumping of waste at the dumpyard demanding measures to pump out waste water from the trenching ground and nearby areas.

Waste water seeping from the flooded trenching ground had made life miserable for 40 families living in the area.

Their protest had a catastrophic effect on city life. Sanitation workers have not collected waste in the past six days in the Corporation area. Stray dogs and cattle feasting on heaps of garbage is a common sight even in posh localities. Scenes at Shakthan Thampuran Market are the same.

Opposition Leader in Thrissur Corporation I. P. Paul said the city was sitting on a time bomb.

“It is ticking fast. Outbreak of epidemics is feared. The public is already struggling to cope with diseases such as chikungunya, dengue and jaundice. Garbage piles are breeding grounds for disease-spreading vectors,” he said.

An all-party meeting convened on Monday to discuss the garbage disposal problem urged the Corporation to take swift action to solve the problems of Lalur residents.

“The problems faced by residents of Lalur should not be seen as a local issue. It should be addressed as a problem of the entire city. The Corporation should find a pragmatic solution,” the meeting said.

The meeting also suggested decentralisation of waste treatment. Instead of dumping the entire city waste at Lalur, arrangements should be made to treat it locally, the meeting noted.

Biogas plants should be erected at major market places and waste management systems should be made compulsory for flats and commercial establishments, the speakers demanded.

Deputy Mayor M. Vijayan said that steps had already been taken to pump out flood water from the trenching ground. Leaders of various political parties participated in the meeting.

Meanwhile, T. K. Vasu, chairman of the Lalur Malineekarana Virudha Samara Samithy said they would not give up their struggle until the Corporation found a lasting solution to the problem.

Last Updated on Tuesday, 21 July 2009 04:57
 

KIADB to use GIS to map 126 industrial units in State

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The Hindu 21.07.2009

KIADB to use GIS to map 126 industrial units in State

Shankar Bennur

Mapping of Peenya, Dobbespet industrial areas to be taken up on pilot basis

 


‘The maps will incorporate all the information prospective industrialists and investors want’

The KIADB has also proposed computerisation of all its activities


THE HINDU— PHOTO: M.A. SRIRAM

Hebbal industrial area in Mysore will be covered under the GIS mapping project in the State. — PHOTO: M.A. SRIRAM

MYSORE: The Karnataka Industrial Areas Development Board (KIADB) has embarked on a novel project.

In its attempt to ensure orderly development of industrial areas and attract more foreign investment to the State, the KIADB proposes to map 126 individual industrial units (single unit complexes) using the Geographical Information System (GIS) to enable investors to know the status of occupancy, availability of plots and implementation of projects by allottees, and other information.

Computerisation

In addition, it proposes to computerise all its activities, including acquisition and development and allotment of land, as well as linking the headquarters with field-level officers for better governance.

Before launching the GIS mapping project in the State, the board will map the Peenya Industrial Area in Bangalore (a fully developed industrial unit) and Dobbespet Industrial Area on the Bangalore-Pune Highway (which is undergoing development as another important industrial unit) on a pilot basis.

“On completion of the pilot project, mapping of the remaining industrial units will be taken up. The pilot project will help us understand the project and make improvements,” said Chief Development Officer, KIADB, Prabhakara Chenni.

Speaking to The Hindu, Mr. Chenni said that GIS mapping was useful for explaining the profile of industrial units since the maps would incorporate all the information prospective industrialists and investors wanted. “The maps give us complete data such as vacant plots, water supply lines and drainage. Besides giving the existing extent of the industrial unit, it also gives inputs on the proposed expansion of the industrial unit,” he said.

Since its inception, the KIADB has developed 126 industrial units covering an area of about 40,000 acres in the State.

Peenya, Electronics City and the Export Promotion Industrial Park (EPIP) in Bangalore; Hebbal in Mysore; Baikampady in Mangalore; Tarihal in Dharwad; Kakati in Belgaum; and the Auto Complex in Shimoga are among the prominent industrial areas developed by the KIADB.

With Karnataka being promoted as a premier destination for industrial ventures, the onus is on the KIADB to ensure balanced industrial development in all regions of the State. According to KIADB, firms having experience in handling large GIS base-mapping, survey, software development and implementation of customised Web-based GIS applications have been invited to submit proposals for implementing the project.

A team of professionals who have handled similar projects will execute and monitor the project in the beginning, it said.

As the maps have to be periodically updated, the KIADB has asked interested agencies to train its officers in this regard.

Technical Consultancy Services Organisation of Karnataka (TECSOK) has been authorised to collect expressions of interest from interested organisations and consortiums.

Last Updated on Tuesday, 21 July 2009 04:51
 

10.43 cents of Gujjarakere area has been encroached upon

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The Hindu 21.07.2009

10.43 cents of Gujjarakere area has been encroached upon

Raviprasad Kamila

Acting on a demand by the vedike, officials surveyed lake area on May 14, June 24

 


Lake has been out of use for quite sometime now

A part of the tank’s area has been used to lay

a road on one side


— PHOTO: RAVIPRASAD KAMILA

NEGLECTED: The Gujjarakere in the Jeppu area in Mangalore has turned into a garbage dumping yard.

MANGALORE: A recent survey of Gujjarakere, an old lake at Jeppu here, conducted by the survey section of the Mangalore taluk office has found that 10.43 cents of the 3.43-acre lake has been encroached upon.

Acting on a demand raised by the Gujjarakere Tirtha Samrakshana Vedike, an action committee fighting to save the lake, the survey of the lake area was conducted on May 14 and June 24. At present, the lake is not being used.

P. Nemu Kottari, secretary of the vedike, told The Hindu that it had been mentioned in the survey report, a copy of which had been obtained by the vedike, that an anganawadi building and a petty shop had been built in the lake area. In addition, three private parties had encroached upon the lake area. A part of the lake area had also been used for laying a road on one side, the report said. Pointing at various spots in the lake, Mr. Kottari alleged that a few people were letting domestic waste water into the lake. There were heaps of garbage, including plastic carry bags and other waste material, dumped in the lake area. Two stormwater drains had been linked to the lake. Mr. Kottari said that the lake had become a dumping yard. Yashawanti, a resident of the area, said sewage from an underground drainage (UGD) leaked in the backyard of her house and entered the lake, particularly during rainy season. She attributed this phenomenon to clogging of two manholes during rainy season. The leak had converted her backyard into a breeding place for mosquitoes and flies, besides emanating foul smell. “My house is full of flies. We have been forced to keep every food item covered,” she said.

She claimed to have complained about it to local councillor M. Rajashree and MLA N. Yogish Bhat. But the problem had not been addressed, she said. Councillor Ms. Rajashree said that a few residents in Jeppu had connected stormewater drains to UGD pipeline through sanitation chambers in their houses and apartments. As a result, manholes in low-lying areas in Jeppu overflowed whenever there was heavy rain. Ms. Rajashree said that whenever the manholes got clogged, she had rushed to the spot to address the problem. She said that some houses in P.L. Colony did not have UGD connection. As a result, a few residents were letting domestic waste water into the lake. Providing UGD connection was the only solution to prevent it, she said. Linge Gowda, assistant executive engineer, Mangalore City Corporation, said that the corporation had invited bids to remove silt in the lake and build a retaining wall to it at an estimated cost of Rs. 99 lakh. The corporation had sent a proposal to this effect to the Government.

The proposal was now before the Chief Engineer of the Public Works Department awaiting technical approval.

Mr. Kottari said that the Government should allocate more funds for removing silt. Nalin Kumar Kateel, MP, had visited the lake recently when the vedike appraised him of the problems, he added.

Last Updated on Tuesday, 21 July 2009 04:48
 


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