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Mayor inspects site for slaughterhouse

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The Hindu           21.03.2013 

Mayor inspects site for slaughterhouse

Mayor Jaya on Wednesday inspected the proposed site for the construction of a modern goat slaughterhouse near the Gandhi Market. The slaughterhouse is to be built at a cost of Rs.1 crore. The Mayor discussed with Corporation Commissioner V.P.Thandapani and other officials the design and facilities to come up at the place. Later, she inspected the progress of development works in Ariyamangalam zone, including the laying a road at Eda Street.

 

Writing on the wall gets dirtier

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The Times of India                        18.03.2013

Writing on the wall gets dirtier

CHENNAI: The city corporation was clearly in a hurry to whitewash all the murals on public walls, but with no concrete plan at hand it has become a tough proposition for the civic body to protect them from being defaced.

While the initial plan of painting graffiti of government schemes is still awaiting the chief minister J Jayalalithaa's nod some party cadres have used the clean slate to show their allegiance to chief minister with birthday greetings.

Sources say the previous DMK regime had spent Rs4.5 crores to paint nearly 15 lakh sqft of walls with murals of scenes from rural life, dance forms and historic landmarks. Now, nearly 80% these paintings have been white-washed, said officials.

A senior corporation official said: "We have plans to use the public walls for advertisements of public welfare schemes and for displaying public messages. We are waiting for permission from the state government."

"The murals on Tamil culture had helped to keep the walls clean because people out of respect did not dare deface it with handbills or urinate on them. But unfortunately the murals have disappeared and posters and scribblings are back", the official adds.

Former mayor M Subramanian, during whose tenure the murals were commissioned, said many white washed walls are now being used to campaign for the ruling party. "Some walls are even carrying birthday wishes to the chief minister," he adds.
Last Updated on Monday, 18 March 2013 09:20
 

Corporation employees seek changes in service rules

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The Hindu                           16.03.2013

Corporation employees seek changes in service rules

Staff Reporter 

An association of employees of nine municipal corporations, excluding Chennai, has urged the State Government to bring in necessary changes to their service rules so as to remove a few “anomalies.”

A release issued at the end of a State Executive Committee meeting says that the Government must recognise all municipal corporation employees as its employees and extend all benefits that the government employees enjoy. The Government must promote all eligible employees in the engineering wing of municipal corporations just as it has allowed in the Tangedco. To do so it must bring in the necessary changes in the service rules of municipal corporation employees.

It must also make changes to introduce the post of sanitary officers. The release said that even small municipal corporations had sanitary officer’s post. Similarly, it should promote sanitary supervisors as conservancy inspectors.

It also asked the Government to fill up vacancies in the Coimbatore Corporation.

 


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