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Public Health / Sanitation

Chennai Metro to fix sewer leaks

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Deccan Chronicle            10.07.2013

Chennai Metro to fix sewer leaks

Pedestrians find it difficult to walk across the road due to sewer overflowing in Taramani. — DC
Pedestrians find it difficult to walk across the road due to sewer overflowing in Taramani. — DC

Chennai: Sewer overflow and mosquito menace complaints are likely to come down in at least a thousand areas in the city in a few months. But, that would be possible only if everything goes according to Chennai Metro Water’s (CMWSSB) plan.

CMWSSB along with the city corporation has jointly undertaken a comprehensive citywide rectification project to contain sewer discharge into stormwater drains causing sewage overflow during rain.

Chennai corporation identified around 1,000 such places where individual sewerage service connections running perpendicular to stormwater drains rupture and thereby discharge sewage into the drains.

CoC has submitted a list to CMWSSB for rectification. Metro was reported to have done an assessment and set a three-month deadline to arrest sewage discharge. The idea is to end the repair ahead of the ensuing northeast monsoon that normally starts by mid October so that sewer overflow would not occur and floods would recede easily.

Most of the 1,000 vulnerable areas involve individual residential service connections. Attributing the problem to rupture in old sewer pipelines, resulting in direct discharge of sewage in to storm water drains, senior CMWSSB officials said the board would bear the cost in case of the poor households if the repair involves minor pipe replacement, which should be the case in most of the identified areas. 

However, the repair cost would be collected in the case of affordable households or if the repair involves more than just a meter of pipeline change, officials added.  The project could end Taramani-like horrors where a child slipped into an open stormwater drain and died last week.

The reason cited was worse than the tragedy itself as CoC officials said the child would not have died if there were no water, in the instant case sewage, in the stormwater drain.

 

‘By Independence day, all city public toilets to be fixed’

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The Hindu                10.07.2013

‘By Independence day, all city public toilets to be fixed’

Repair missionWith the proposal for new toilets not working out, the Chennai Corporation is focussing its attentions on existing ones. While 60 toilets will be rebuilt, 294 will be renovated —Photo: R. Ravindran
Repair missionWith the proposal for new toilets not working out, the Chennai Corporation is focussing its attentions on existing ones. While 60 toilets will be rebuilt, 294 will be renovated —Photo: R. Ravindran

To increase patronage of public restrooms, the Chennai Corporation is on a mission to repair and renovate all damaged toilets in the city.

The civic body recently conducted a survey of all 905 toilets across the 15 zones in the city, and found that only 551 were in good shape. Of the rest, 294 were partially damaged and 60 were completely dilapidated. Of the 905, 31 are pay-and-use toilets, while 874 are free.

The focus on improving existing restrooms came about as the proposal to install 2,000 newly-designed toilets under a public-private partnership (PPP) failed to take off, officials said.

All the existing toilets will be completely restored by August 15, using Corporation funds. With this, the civic body aims at getting more residents to use the existing facilities, until it can put in place additional ones, a Corporation official said.

“Work is underway to restore all the 294 damaged public toilets in the city. Estimates for 242 of these have already been prepared, and work has already begun in several structures. The dilapidated toilets will be demolished and reconstructed in three months,” he said.

He added, “After the restoration, illegal collection of charges at toilets will be stopped.”

Some of the zones with a large number of damaged toilets include Tiruvottiyur, which has 42 damaged ones, Tondiarpet with 21, Royapuram with 27, Thiru.Vi.Ka. Nagar with 47 and Anna Nagar with 32.

According to an official, for the earlier PPP proposal, sites for new toilets had already been identified based on inputs from residents in various localities.

The toilets were to be made using high-density polyethylene or polycarbonate sheets or equivalent material. The proposal failed, as the civic body and private entities could not come to an agreement over how much advertising space the private entities would be able to use at the facilities.

 

Boil water before use

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The Hindu              03.07.2013

Boil water before use

City Municipal Corporation has asked people to filter, and boil water before consumption.

A release from the Corporation Commissioner, M. Ashokan, said that water released from Karnataka dam was reaching Mettur Dam. The water passes through sand and hence its colour gets changed. The release said the people need not panic as the water was safe for drinking.

 


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