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Jail for water thieves

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Deccan Chronicle               30.01.2014

Jail for water thieves

Hyderabad: Those with illegal water connections can be imprisoned for up to five years. Six cases have been booked and at least three people have been arrested in the last two months for possessing illegal water connection at their residences.

Tenants too need to be careful while taking houses on rent. As per the Hyderabad Metropolitan Water Supply and Sewerage Board Act, cases will be booked against the house owner, and if the house owner does not stay on the premises, criminal cases will be booked against the occupants whomsoever it may be, including tenants.

Revant, the tenant of a house in Yadav Nagar at Alkapuri of LB nagar  was arrested in December, after it was revealed during an inspection that a  disconnected water pipeline was re-connected without permission from the Board.

The owner of the house Purushotham Reddy stays abroad and was shown as absconding in the police report.

“Ask for the latest water bill and Consumer Account Number stating you want to submit your mobile number to the Water Board officials for SMS alert on bills. Every connection has been given a CAN. If there is no CAN, then it’s an illegal  connection,” said an official.

Sreedhar, a resident of Manikyanagar in Qutbullapur, was remanded to 14-day judicial custody recently for illegal water line.

Water Board has also started booking criminal cases against those having second connections.

“A second water connection is not allowed. They have to be surrendered. We (Board) will upgrade the existing water line from half inch to one inch depending on the feasibility and number of families staying in the building,” said Board director (revenue) P.S. Suryanarayana.

The Water Board supplies 340 MGD water in the city but gets paid for only 210 MGD. About 40 per cent water is unaccounted for.

Earlier, over 50 per cent water was unaccounted for but measures initiated by present MD J. Syamala Rao has brought down the UFW.

For years, illegal connections, second connections and unmetered connections have been eating into the revenues of the Board.

In another case, a criminal case was booked against one S. Reddy when Board officials noticed that he was illegally drawing drinking water from the water supply pipeline.

Suryanarayana said that those with illegal water connections could be booked for prosecution under Sections 52, read with Section-49 (1) (b) (c), of the HMWS&SB Act, 1989, and also Section-3 (2) (a) of the Prevention of Damages to Public Property Act, 1984 and Section 430 and 379 of the IPC.

The Board can also attach the properties of defaulters under the Revenue Recovery Act.

“Under these sections, the imprisonment can be up to five years,” he added.

The Board can also attach the properties of defaulters under the Revenue Recovery Act.

A “red notice” is issued to the defaulter stating it is the final notice and he or she will have to pay the bill along with arrears.

On non-payment of the bill, Form-I is issued stating that officials will come for attach the property and seven days is given to the consumer to pay up.

If the consumer still does not pay, Form-II is issued by officials for attaching the property. Almost 4,000 red notices have been issued till date.

 

Demolition Drive of BDA Deferred

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The New Indian Express              30.01.2014

Demolition Drive of BDA Deferred

The Bhubaneswar Development Authority’s (BDA) initiative to use implosion technology for building demolition has been deferred due to delay in processing of the requisite permission.

Even though Commissionerate Police has approved the BDA’s proposal on use of implosion technology, the latter has to get additional NOCs to ensure no damage or injury to property or life during the demolition.

BDA officials along with the Indore-based implosion technology expert made a presentation before the police on Tuesday.

The special drive has been deferred till February 18 after which about eight illegal constructions will be lined up by the BDA for demolition.

The implosion technology will be used for high rise construction as manual demolition usually takes days to be completed.

 

Now, BBMP Slashes Betterment Fees

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The New Indian Express              30.01.2014

Now, BBMP Slashes Betterment Fees

A day after the BBMP Council announced betterment charges to regularise revenue land, it drastically cut the rates.

The reduction is aimed at appeasing voters ahead of the Lok Sabha elections, due in about three months.

Payment of betterment charges entitles citizens to obtain ‘A’ khatas (or ownership deeds), which then makes them eligible for loans. On Tuesday, the council had approved betterment charges of `350 a square metre for plots up to 1,000 square metres and `300 for plots measuring more than 1,000 square metres.

On Wednesday, the council passed a resolution slashing the rates to `200 for old areas (100 wards) and `250 for new areas (recently-added 98 wards). Councillors across party lines welcomed the decision.

Some councillors suggested the charges be collected from individual site owners and not from bulk land owners. “That way the BBMP gets more revenue,” Kacharakanahalli councillor Padmanabha Reddy said.

BBMP Commissioner M Lakshminarayana did not agree. “Once land is carved up into sites, we cannot levy betterment charges for roads and CA sites. In the case of bulk land, we can collect money for every inch,” he said. 

Bulk land owners pay a fee to convert agricultural land into residential and commercial sites. “Once the owner gets a khata and decides to develop a layout, he will have to get the Bangalore Development Authority’s clearance and pay them their charges as well,” Lakshminarayana said.

When individual site owners build houses, they pay for plan approval, he added.

The government has notified draft rules for the Akrama-Sakrama bill, and the last date for submitting objections is Thursday.

“We were not informed. The BBMP Council has not got an opportunity to discuss the bill. We want to have a say,” councillor Padmanabha Reddy said.

He urged a special meeting to discuss the long-awaited bill. “Let us meet District-in-charge Minister Ramalinga Reddy and request him to extend the last date,” he said.

 


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