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Cumbum Municipality to tap solar power

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The Hindu                 02.05.2013

Cumbum Municipality to tap solar power

Staff Reporter

Rs.7.7 lakh to be spent for setting up plant

The Cumbum Municipality plans to tap solar energy on a large scale to trim its power bill. Initially, solar power would be provided to the municipal office, municipal maternity hospital and the municipal abattoir, said Chairman T.Shiva Kumar.

Presiding over a council meeting here on Tuesday evening, he said Rs.7.7 lakh would be spent on setting up a solar power plant for the municipal office and for its computer centre, and Rs.4 lakh would be spent on a solar plant for the maternity home and the municipal abattoir.

The chairman told the council that plans were under way and funds earmarked for installing CCTV network in the municipal administrative office and the Cumbum bus stand.

The municipality had started fixing CFL bulbs on streets to reduce expenses on electricity, the Chairman added.

The disruption in the supply of drinking water was raised by K.Saraswathi, councillor of the seventh ward.

The Chairman said the damage caused to the pipeline was the prime reason for the erratic water supply. Old pipes connecting the pumping station and the supply tank should be replaced with new ones, he added.

A.S.Parthiban, 29th ward councillor, suggested the municipality reactivate a well dug on the Periyar river bed.

 

Need for action against unauthorised buildings

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The Hindu                 02.05.2013

Need for action against unauthorised buildings

A Corporation official sealing an unauthorised building on Avanashi Road in the city on Tuesday. —Photo: K. Ananthan
A Corporation official sealing an unauthorised building on Avanashi Road in the city on Tuesday. —Photo: K. Ananthan

Unless the action against unauthorised buildings continues, soon structures will come up without regard for the sanctioned plan, is what the Madras High Court observed while delivering a judgement in 2009 against unauthorised structures.

Four years down the line, it appears, the Coimbatore Corporation has not followed the order.

The local body chose to act only last week after a fire accident in a building snuffed out life of four women.

The Corporation began with sealing and locking buildings under construction or that have just been completed.

As of Sunday, it had sealed and locked 36 buildings, to which it had issued notices more than four months ago. The civic body ought to have acted against the buildings after the expiry of notice period in September, October or November last year.

But it chose not to act.

The 36 buildings were part of the 55 the Local Planning Authority had identified for the Corporation early last year.

The civic body did not explain the inaction, either. Mayor S.M. Velusamy told journalists that the Corporation had acted as quickly as possible and the action had a few parallels. He also said that the action would continue.

The Mayor’s assurance was fine but the Corporation action against unauthorised buildings should extend to those that are in use, says K. Kathirmathiyon, Secretary, Coimbatore Consumer Cause. The organisation was the petitioner in the public interest litigation that prompted the Court to make the aforementioned observations.

Without waiting for the Local Planning Authority to furnish list of buildings, the Corporation should act against the unauthorised structures, for public safety is of utmost importance. But then the civic body does not have the intent to act against such buildings, for, if it had it would not have reduced the per-sq.ft. penalty for the unauthorised structures from 50 paise to 25 paise.

Mr. Kathirmathiyon says that in 1993 the Corporation penalty was 50 paise a sq.ft. In 2003 the then Council chose to bring it down to 25 paise a sq.ft., which is nothing but a move aimed at going soft on violators.

If what the Corporation is saying is true and if people have to repose faith in civic body, it has to increase the penalty.

Assessment

It should also stop assessing such buildings for property tax. The assessment appears to lend a certain amount of legitimacy to the buildings, which not many people are aware. If the Corporation were to do so it will send a strong message to the public.

But with an eye on the possible loss of revenue because of not assessing such buildings, the Corporation is reluctant to act.

“Money taking precedence over public safety is bad governance,” Mr. Kathirmathiyon says.

He suggests that the civic body insist on a completion certificate and a similar one from the Fire and Rescue Services Department.

When the latter refuses to issue one for buildings that are not fire-safety compliant and the Corporation discovers that building are in violation of approved plan, it should stop assessing the buildings. And the Tangedco can be asked to not supply power.

Without the basic amenities, builders will be forced to fall in line.

It is a simple step, which if the Corporation begins will establish the rule of law. And it should do so by starting with public buildings and special buildings for which fire safety license is mandatory.

Corporation Commissioner G. Latha says that the civic body has thus far stopped with issuing notices but not acting against buildings with violations. It will begin soon.

 

High Court permits applications for work in Pallavaram

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The Hindu                 02.05.2013

High Court permits applications for work in Pallavaram

Special Correspondent

In a move that will be bring relief to residents of Pallavaram, the Madras High Court, in an interim order, permitted the competent authorities to receive applications for construction, renovation or modification of buildings in two survey numbers in the area.

These areas had been declared as protected under the Ancient Monuments and Archaeological Sites and Remains (Amendment and Validation) Act. Any such work in these areas has been frozen since 2010. The court however said the applications need not be processed till June 4,

Justice K. Venkataraman passed the interim order on a writ petition by the Federation of Civic and Welfare Associations of Pallavaram Municipality. He ordered notice.

The federation’s vice-president, V. Ramanujam said the petition had been filed to highlight the hardship faced by residents in and around the areas under Survey No.63 and 56 of Pallavaram. The Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) had included 21.77 acres in survey no.63 and 36.15 acres in the other survey number as a protected area stating that “Megalithic Cairns and Cists showing clear structural postures” were available there. Thus, any kind of repair or construction work in 300 metres around the area of the two survey numbers had been frozen.

Nearly 5,000 houses and 8,000 were affected by this stricture.

Hence, the residents could not carry out any repair or renovation, water supply and sewerage works. Whenever an application was made either for construction, repair or renovation of existing buildings, the municipal and other authorities directed the applicants to approach the Central government or the competent authorities under the Act for permission or No Objection certificate.

Mr. Ramanujam said that under the Act, only the Central government had the power to declare an ancient monument to be one of national importance.

In the absence of a Central notification, the question of protected monument or protected area would not arise. The notification declaring the “Megalithic Cairns and Cists showing clear structural postures” as a protected monument had not been issued. Under such circumstances, the proceedings of the ASI and CMDA declaring the area as a protected monument and thereby preventing any construction was arbitrary and illegal. The impugned action violated the Right to Property, he said.

Since late 2010, residents had gathered on various occasions to protest the restrictions on construction activity and had approached both the ASI and the State government.

Based on ASI communication, the areas were declared protected and any repair and reconstruction work prohibited.

 


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