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Public Health / Sanitation

Lack of drainage facility inconveniences residents

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The Hindu      04.03.2011

Lack of drainage facility inconveniences residents

Special Correspondent

Flies and mosquitoes proliferate in stagnant waste water

Unhygienic conditions: Drainage water overflowing on Raman Street in Salem. - Photo: P. Goutham
Unhygienic conditions: Drainage water overflowing on Raman Street in Salem. - Photo: P. Goutham

The residents of Raman Street in ward 13 here are living in sub-human conditions.

The street has no proper drainage facility and as a result sewer water overflows onto the street and collects at various points as cesspools.

The mosquitoes make the best out of the prevailing conditions by proliferating in lakhs, leading to serious health hazards.

“We have forgotten what it is like to have a good and sound sleep for months now. The mosquitoes and flies swarm our houses, thus making our lives miserable,” says a resident.

To add to the woes, the street itself looks battle-ravaged with craters and potholes.

“Even to walk on it requires special skill. New entrants into the street invariably fall. The school-going children are the worst-hit,” says another resident.

The street lights remain showpieces of the past. None of them is burning nowadays, leaving the citizens to live in fear of chain-snatchers and rowdy elements, say residents. The residents claim that they have approached the Salem Corporation several times with petitions regarding the state of affairs.

“Nothing has so far moved the civic body, which remains insensitive to our sufferings,” they point out.

They urge the Corporation to redress their grievances at least immediately after the elections.

 

Dialysis centres of Chennai Corporation opened

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The Hindu          01.03.2011

Dialysis centres of Chennai Corporation opened

Staff Reporter

: Chennai Corporation on Monday opened two dialysis centres at its diagnostic laboratories near Valluvar Kottam and in Perambur to provide free treatment to underprivileged patients.

Inaugurating the facility near Valluvar Kottam, Mayor M. Subramanian said an estimated 25,000 persons needed dialysis. Each of the centres would have two machines. These centres, set up at a total cost of Rs.50 lakh, would offer dialysis to five persons daily.

In a release, he said patients are charged up to Rs.3,000 each for dialysis in private hospitals and a few voluntary organisations are offering the service at a subsidised rate. Many patients, requiring dialysis twice or thrice a week, cannot afford this. Pointing out that the Corporation would not be able to sustain the free dialysis service for long time on its own he appealed to the NGOs to support the initiative.

He said that 1,604 students were detected with symptoms of kidney diseases in a camp held recently for nearly one lakh students of Chennai Schools. Such initiatives were aimed at prevention and timely intervention.

Chennai Corporation Commissioner D. Karthikeyan was present during the occasion.


  • To offer dialysis to five persons daily
  • Appeal to NGOs to support initiative
  •  

    Coimbatore Corporation to let out more mobile toilets

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    The Hindu       16.02.2011

    Coimbatore Corporation to let out more mobile toilets

    Karthik Madhavan

    Toilets used during the World Classical Tamil Conference in Coimbatore. -Photo:K.Ananthan
    Toilets used during the World Classical Tamil Conference in Coimbatore. -Photo:K.Ananthan

    Every time the Coimbatore Corporation receives a call from another local body in the State, it knows a request for hiring its mobile toilets is coming.

    There is a huge demand for the 60 toilets the corporation purchased for around Rs. 4 crore to cater to the city's visitors during the World Classical Tamil Conference last year. Sources in the corporation say the toilets have “travelled” to Thanjavur, Tiruvannamalai, Udhagamandalam, and a few other places.

    The civic body has five types of toilets—big and small, and Indian and Western—to be used at places where people gather in large numbers. The corporation felt the need for an easier and a safer mode of transport while transporting toilets, as the existing vehicles did not fit the bill. Hence it has decided to go in for 20 trailers and two lorries to transport the toilets. A resolution has been passed, sanctioning the purchase of a lorry at Rs. 21.30 lakh. Another such proposal is in the offing.

    To let 20 toilets

    According to sources, only 20 toilets are to be rented out. The rest will be placed in 40 locations identified for this.

    The civic body also passed a resolution fixing the hire amount for big toilets at Rs. 1,000 a day, and Rs. 500 for the smaller ones and those made for women. Sources also add that a proposal for attaching a septic tank to the toilets is on the cards. At present, an outlet from the toilet is connected to the nearest underground drainage opening or let in to a pit dug exclusively for the purpose.

     


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