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CMRL asked to submit data on heritage buildings

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The Hindu                23.05.2013

CMRL asked to submit data on heritage buildings

Staff Reporter

The Chennai Corporation Council has asked Chennai Metro Rail Limited(CMRL) to share its data on the structural condition of heritage buildings near the path of the Metro Rail project.

According to officials of Chennai Corporation, CMRL has been delaying the submission of the monthly report based on compilation of such data for the past 11 months. Councillors reiterated the need for the report being shared with Chennai Corporation on a monthly basis so that the impact of the vibrations on heritage buildings could be assessed.

Responding to a question by deputy mayor P. Benjamin on Wednesday, Mayor Saidai Duraisamy said CMRL was “yet to submit a safety report on heritage buildings such as Ripon Buildings.”

“We have requested the CMRL to share the data. We will wait,” said the Mayor.

The data collected every day by CMRL from structures such as Ripon Buildings and Victoria Public Hall continues to be a closely guarded secret even after repeated reminders by the civic body.

“They collect data on a daily basis. Why can’t they share it with us? The safety report would help us take measures to ensure that Ripon Buildings is structurally safe,” said a councillor.

CMRL officials claimed that they collected data from eight different devices that have been installed on the premises of Ripon Buildings. CMRL employees visit the premises regularly on a daily basis to collect this data.

The equipment used to assess conditions, CMRL officials said, include ground settlement meter, rod extension meter, inclinometer, building settlement marker, tilt meter, crack meter, optical target and tape extension meter.

CMRL officials reiterated they were “committed to protection of heritage buildings.” CMRL workers have been assessing technical parameters meticulously and accordingly, altering the speed of machinery used in the course of operations on the premises of Ripon Buildings.

The data to be shared by CMRL will help Chennai Corporation assess the safety of its heritage buildings by measuring minute movement across surface cracks and joints, vertical settlement, soil properties and small changes from horizontal level.

 

Corporation decides to regulate auto stands

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The Hindu               16.05.2013

Corporation decides to regulate auto stands

too many?Autorickshaws waiting at a stand near TVS Tollgate in Tiruchi. — Photo: M.Moorthy
too many?Autorickshaws waiting at a stand near TVS Tollgate in Tiruchi. — Photo: M.Moorthy

City to be classified into different zones; permission to be granted on the basis of space, public requirement.

The Tiruchirapalli City Corporation has decided to streamline and regulate autorickshaw stands in the city, a long pending demand of consumer organisations.

The civic body has set in motion a process to regulate and issue permission for autorickshaw stands across the city. The civic body proposes to classify the city into different zones and grant permission for autorickshaw stands depending on the available space and public requirement.

The Corporation has also said that it had not given any permission for autorickshaw stands in the city for any individual organisation. Hence, signboards put up by unions or parties in certain autorickshaw stands should be removed within three days, Corporation Commissioner V.P.Thandapani said in a press release.

Applications are to be invited from autorickshaw drivers for giving approval with specific number of vehicles to be permitted in each stand. Permission will be granted in consultation with the police and transport departments, sources in the Corporation told The Hindu .

The move comes in the wake of a recent directive of the Madurai Bench of the Madras High Court to the Corporation to consider a representation from A.Thirupathy, district president of the Tiruchi District DMDK Thozhilalargal Sangam, seeking a direction to the civic body to allow its members to operate from the auto stands in the city.

Though the Corporation in 1999 had approved and notified over 90 auto stands in the city, several unapproved auto stands have mushroomed in the city. Many of them have come to occupy vantage road spaces, posing a traffic hindrance. There have been allegations that some unions are demanding money to allow new autos from their stands at different rates depending on the location.

Mr.Thirupathy, in his petition before the court, said some trade unions have occupied the parking areas (autorickshaw stands) and did not allow any new entrant. Auto drivers at the stands formed groups and did not permit other auto drivers to park their vehicles in the stands. They demanded Rs.30, 000 to Rs.50,000 from the drivers towards charges for parking their vehicles in the stands, he alleged. Though a representation was made to the Corporation, it has not been considered, he added.

The High Court in its order directed the Corporation to consider and pass appropriate orders on the representation of Mr.Thirupathy within four weeks.

Speaking to The Hindu , Mr.Thirupathy and other DMDK office bearers opposed the hegemony of some unions and demanded that any auto driver with valid licence and permits should be allowed to operate from any stand.

Fakruddin Babu, general secretary, CITU Autorickshaw Drivers Union, welcomed the Corporation move to regulate the auto stands but insisted that the existing auto stands be allowed to continue. “We have previously sought approval for 100 new auto stands. We have no objection to removing those hindering traffic and we support regulating the stands,” he said. He, however, denied that the unions were demanding money to admit new autos into the stands. “If an auto driver died, a new entrant could be paying some money to the family to take the place,” he maintained.

Welcoming the Corporation decision, S.Pushpavanam, secretary, Consumer Protection Council, Tamil Nadu, said autos are meant to be on the run and there was no justification for unions or groups to claim jurisdiction over a particular stand. “We have been demanding that the number of auto stands be reduced. It is essential that the auto stands are streamlined and regulated,” he said.

 

Online birth, death certificates

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The Hindu               16.05.2013

Online birth, death certificates

Staff Reporter

By next week, the Coimbatore Corporation is likely to make available online birth and death certificates. The move comes a month after the deadline the Corporation had fixed for introducing the services. According to sources, by clicking html (hyper text mark up language) links at the Corporation website, users will be taken to pages where they could choose if they want birth or death certificates. Once the data entered is verified and found to be true, the Corporation would display the certificate with a digital signature.

The users could then take printouts of the certificates to be used as official document or furnish the same as document of evidence.

As a run up to making available online the facility, the Corporation had computerised the records from 1981 to 2011, which worked out to nine lakh birth certificates and six lakh death certificates.

 


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