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General Administration

Corporation to cancel parking lot contract

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The Hindu             31.07.2013 

Corporation to cancel parking lot contract

Staff Reporter

The Coimbatore Corporation is in the process of cancelling the contract of the person who had taken on lease the parking lot at the Gandhipuram Town Bus Stand. Commissioner G. Latha told journalists on Tuesday that the civic body had decided to terminate the contract after it found the contractor charging customers in excess of the prescribed amount.

The contractor was supposed to collect Rs. 5 for 24 hours. But he had been charging customers Rs. 10 for three hours. The civic body officials found the contractor breaching the contract terms a week or so ago and fined him Rs. 80,000.

It had decided to cancel the contract after he was found continuing the illegality.

Ms. Latha said the action would serve as a warning for other contractors. If members of the public found parking lot contractors fleecing them they could send message to the grievance cell on 92822 02422.

 

Corporation to launch drive against illegal water connections

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The Hindu             31.07.2013

Corporation to launch drive against illegal water connections

The Coimbatore Corporation will soon launch a drive to identify illegal water connections and initiate action against those who have such connections. According to Commissioner G. Latha and Deputy Commissioner S. Sivarasu the Corporation will launch the programme in the next few days and its focus will be on added areas.

The decision to focus on added areas follows a study the Corporation conducted a few days ago in Ward 32 – Vilankurichi. During their door-to-door checking, the Corporation officials found around 500 illegal drinking water connections in that the house owners had not paid the security deposit. They also did not pay the monthly water charges.

The result of the exercise has led the Corporation to believe that if it were to conduct similar exercise in the added areas, it would be able to stumble upon many more connections.

Mr. Sivarasu says that the Corporation estimates that there are around 3,000 unauthorised connections.

To identify the illegal connections, the Corporation will soon depute teams of five engineers each to conduct a thorough survey. Assuming that an engineer checks 50 connections a day, a team will check 250 connections a day and team will go on until it completes a ward.

After identifying the illegal connections, the Corporation will collect the necessary details and present the same to the senior officials, who will serve notices on house owners to provide them an opportunity to legalise their connections.

If the owners accept the offer, the Corporation will continue to supply water. If not, it will sever the connection and also initiate action, Ms. Latha says.

The two officers say that the Corporation faces problems of illegal water connections because there was unscrupulous issue of connections in large numbers in added areas when they were municipalities, town panchayats or village panchayats prior to the merger with the Corporation. After merger, the Corporation had a tough time collecting details related to not only water connection but also other details like property tax assessments, vacant sites, etc.

Ms. Latha says that the regularisation will bring increase in one-time payment towards regularisation and also water charges.

There are around 2.25 lakh water connections in the Corporation.

 

Unauthorised waste recycling units sealed

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The Hindu             30.07.2013 

Unauthorised waste recycling units sealed

Staff Reporter

Coimbatore Corporation on Monday sealed seven units in Vellalore that dealt with glass and plastic medical waste. The seven were unauthorised.

According to A. Amalraj, Assistant Commissioner in-charge, South Zone, the civic body on July 10 served notices on the owners these units asking them to shutdown their operations within 24 hours.

The civic body acted against the owners on July 29 after they failed to comply with the order.

He said that Engineer in-charge of South Zone P. Ganeshwaran and himself sealed the units that functioned from makeshift structures near the southern side of the Vellalore dump yard.

The units segregated wastes that could be reused to send them to recycling units and dumped in the open the wastes that could not be used again.

Complaints

Mr. Amalraj said that the Corporation action followed repeated complaints from Vellalore residents who said that they often found medical waste dumped in the open.

Even as the Coimbatore Corporation acted against the units, the Tamil Nadu Pollution Control Board engaged the owners of the units by calling for a meeting. District Environment Engineer, Coimbatore South, K. Ravichandran, said that the board officials explained to the owners the rules to drive home the point that what they did with the wastes was illegal.

The board officials told the owners that they could procure such wastes after it has been autoclaved by units authorised to handle medical wastes.

Their buying wastes directly from hospitals was against rules and that they should give up such practises. Mr. Ravichandran said that a few owners were curious to know how they could go about conducting their business in authorised fashion so as to escape legal action.

 


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