Urban News

  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size
General Administration

Hawkers will have to get licence from corporation

Print PDF

The Hindu             29.11.2013

Hawkers will have to get licence from corporation

In a step towards regulating street vendors in the city, the Tiruchirapalli City Corporation has decided to introduce a licensing system for them.

The move comes in the wake of the recent identification of vending zones in each of the four zones in the city towards implementing the National Policy on Urban Street Vendors.

About 80 places have been identified as vending zones, including 20 in Srirangam zone, 15 in Golden Rock, 37 in Ariyamangalam, and eight in K. Abishekapuram zone, where vendors will be allowed to operate.

All other places in the city will be treated as non-vending zones.

The list of vending zones identified by the corporation does not include roads in the city’s main commercial area such as the NSB Road, Big Bazaar Street, Singarathope, and Nandhi Kovil Street, where a large number of vendors operate every day.

On Wednesday, the corporation council approved a resolution fixing an annual licence fee of Rs. 1,200 for street vendors. Vendors running temporary shops in an area of 6 ft x 4 ft would be required to pay a daily fee of Rs. 50 in areas classified as zone A and Rs. 30 in areas under zone B. Street vendors engaged in business without getting approval would be liable to pay a penalty of Rs. 250. The products sold by them would be seized and auctioned. The resolution said a Town Vending Committee would be formed as required under the national policy. The list of vendors in each area would be prepared by the corporation and they would be issued licences and allotted space for carrying on their trade. To obtain the licences, street vendors should be residents of the corporation limits. Space allotted to a particular vendor cannot be transferred. The National Policy on Urban Street Vendors recognises street vending as an integral part of the urban retail trade and provides legal status to the vendors.

Vendors are to be enumerated ward wise and each street vendor will be registered by the town vending committee and issued identity cards.

 

Civic agencies told to act against illegal slaughtering

Print PDF

The Hindu             29.11.2013

Civic agencies told to act against illegal slaughtering

R. Sivaraman

The National Green Tribunal, Southern Bench, on Thursday, directed the Chennai Corporation and Tamil Nadu Pollution Control Board (TNPCB) to take immediate action to stop illegal slaughtering in the city.

The Bench passed the interim order on an application filed by People for Cattle in India represented by its trustee, G. Arun Prasanna, who sought to ban illegal slaughterhouses.

In his application, Mr. Prasanna listed around 20 places in the city where illegal slaughtering took place. In someareas of the city, the illegal activity had been taking place adjacent to meat shops. Such acts caused severe damage tothe environment, he said.

“The entire act of slaughtering affects the environment as it is happening in places which are not approved and which neither have proper waste treatment plants nor freezer facilities. Such places are unhygienic and slaughtering of infected cattle was done without knowledge,” he said.

The animal welfare organisation said the authorities had been careless and negligent, failing to take any kind of action to avert damage caused due to illegal slaughtering.

When the matter came up for hearing before the Bench on Thursday, Kaushik Narain Sharma, counsel for the applicant, requested the Tribunal to pass an interim order to ban illegal slaughterhouses.

He also said, activists had found, as per a recent survey, illegal slaughtering was happening in 55 places in the city.

The Bench, comprising its judicial member, Justice M. Chockalingam, and expert member, R. Nagendran, said, “There is no impediment felt by the Tribunal to issue direction to the Chennai Corporation and TNPCB to take immediate action and also steps to stop illegal slaughtering in the city of Chennai.”

Stressing that punitive action must be initiated against the violators, the Bench directed the authorities of the Corporationand TNPCB to file reports in the next hearing on December 12.

The animal welfare activist also argued that as per information provided by the district environmental engineer (DEE), Chennai, the Corporation’s slaughterhouses in Saidapet, Villivakkam and Pulianthope were illegal. The DEE had issued show-cause notices to them.

Corporation slaughterhouses in Saidapet, Villivakkam and Pulianthope were found to be illegal.

 

2 unauthorised buildings sealed

Print PDF

The Hindu             28.11.2013 

2 unauthorised buildings sealed

The Vellore Local Planning Authority (VLPA) sealed two unauthorised multistoreyed commercial buildings under construction on the Mangalore-Villupuram National Highway in Virudhambut here on Wednesday.

According to the District Collector and Chairman of the VLPA, who ordered the sealing of the buildings under Sections 56 and 57 of the Urban Town Planning Act 1971, one of the buildings had been built with a ground floor and three floors having a total plinth area of 11,000 square feet without the plan approval of the VLPA.

 


Page 43 of 143