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Public Health / Sanitation

Corporation goes all out on anti-rodent drive

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The Hindu     31.08.2012

Corporation goes all out on anti-rodent drive

Special Correspondent

Carcasses of 600 rats recovered; 25 dogs captured from hospitals

A day after the Chennai Corporation launched a drive to remove rats and dogs from the premises of government hospitals and public places in the city, the civic body managed to recover the carcasses of around 600 rats and capture nearly 25 dogs from hospitals.

On Wednesday, the Corporation had launched a drive to unearth the burrows of rats on hospital premises. According to the Corporation officials, workers were employed in all the 15 zones between 4 p.m. and 7 p.m. on Wednesday to lay rat traps. Around 248 teams of three workers each scouted 28 government hospitals, 47 Corporation dispensaries and family welfare centres, 77 markets, 33 bus stations and 80 godowns. Workers were deployed in 30 commercial complexes and 7,031 rat traps set. On Thursday, 587 dead rats were collected. A Corporation health official said the traps would be set again to remove all rodents from the vicinity.

Dog catchers captured 12 dogs from the premises of the children’s hospital attached to the Institute of Child Health and the Institute of Obstetrics and Gynaecology. Around 10 dogs were rounded up from Government Stanley Hospital in Mint. According to a release from the Corporation, the effort would be continued for a fortnight.

The drive was taken up on the directions of the Chief Minister who ordered that hygiene be improved in all the hospital campuses in the State. The instruction was in the wake of a recent incident at the Kasturba Gandhi Hospital for Women and Children in Triplicane where the body of an infant was found with injuries on it Visitors to the hospital and patient attendants had also complained of the menace of rats and dogs on the campus.

Meanwhile, a health inspector attached to the Rajiv Gandhi Government General Hospital was suspended on Thursday for not doing enough to maintain cleanliness. The Health Minister V.S. Vijay, who had come to the hospital to participate in a function, conducted a surprise check and found the hospital wanting in cleanliness, his office said.

  •  Teams visit bus stations, godowns, dispensaries
  • Health inspector suspended for inaction
Last Updated on Friday, 31 August 2012 04:38
 

Not dengue, says Chennai Corporation

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The Hindu    25.08.2012

Not dengue, says Chennai Corporation

Staff Reporter

With 299 dengue cases having been reported in the city this year so far, the Chennai Corporation’s health department has intensified its mosquito control operations. Denying that the death of one-year-old K. Nitish was caused by dengue, a senior corporation official said, “The boy did have dengue. But his death was not due to the disease. He had a history of poor intake as well as kidney and liver problems. The cause of his death is multi-organ dysfunction syndrome.”

According to a press release, the Chennai Corporation has been continuing the mosquito control drive launched three months ago. Fogging operations are being undertaken every Tuesday and Thursday in all 200 wards. Civic body officials will also remove all waste material that serve as breeding ground of mosquitoes. Distribution of pamphlets for creating awareness among residents has also been intensified, the release said.

The civic body will also conduct medical camps in residential localities that have reported cases of dengue or malaria.

The release added that the child did not have any symptoms such as fever and bleeding in the gums and skin that usually indicate complications related to dengue. The reports on liver and kidney functioning of the child show that the organs were affected. The child underwent dialysis, the release said.

Last Updated on Saturday, 25 August 2012 04:50
 

Drain works: Chennai Corporation admits it is leaden-footed, seeks more funds

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The Times of India     23.08.2012

Drain works: Chennai Corporation admits it is leaden-footed, seeks more funds

CHENNAI: The inordinate delay by the Chennai Corporation and the Public Works Department (PWD) in completing storm water drain works in the city under the Centre's flagship Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission (JNNURM) is expected to scale up the project cost.

The civic body for the first time officially admitted that only 25% of the work had been completed till July, just five months before the deadline of December 31. It now plans to seek an additional Rs 28 crore under the JNNURM because "construction costs have risen over the last four years". "In the last few years, prices of basic materials such as sand, gravel, cement and steel have risen," says a council resolution that approves the request for funds. For works taken up by the corporation and the PWD, Rs 1,447.91 crore was initially sanctioned. The civic body now wants it increased to Rs 1475 crore.

The justification for this is that the funds were released according to a plan submitted by the corporation in 2008 and that there have been additional costs and inflation in the four years since. The corporation said it had incurred extra costs while breaking down existing drains and correcting sewerage drains.

The corporation and the PWD submitted their plan to the Centre in 2008, and the funds were approved later that year. Despite the work beginning in 2010, the contractors selected for the project are way behind schedule. The reasons vary from elections and the monsoon to metro rail construction. "The state and local body elections were held. There are rains every year from September to December. The traffic police do not allow construction at night because of metro rail construction," stated the resolution. The third reason has managed to raise a few eyebrows because construction at metro rail sites takes place only on Anna Salai and Poonamallee High Road, both of which come under the state highways department.

Encroachment and lack of coordination among the agencies involved are also stated as reasons. "Nearly 3,500 encroachers had to be moved to facilitate the construction of storm water drains and had to be provided alternate residences. Then there were metrowater pipes and electric cables that had to be corrected by other agencies." 

Last Updated on Thursday, 23 August 2012 05:57
 


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