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Dhobis oppose move to auction washing area

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The Hindu                        13.03.2013

Dhobis oppose move to auction washing area

Earning a living:Members of the families engaged in washing clothes want the Coimbatore Corporation to give up the move to auction the washing place near Edayar Street.–PHOTO: S. SIVA SARAVANAN
Earning a living:Members of the families engaged in washing clothes want the Coimbatore Corporation to give up the move to auction the washing place near Edayar Street.–PHOTO: S. SIVA SARAVANAN.
 
Those engaged in the work fear their livelihood will be hit.

On a lane off Edayar Street, a group of women is busy washing clothes at the Coimbatore Corporation’s washing place.

As they continue to beat the clothes to the ground to remove dirt, they are perhaps not able to take their minds off the issue that concerns their livelihood.

Auction

The issue has to do with the Corporation’s move to auction the place.

If the Corporation were to do so, the families that are dependent on washing clothes for a living would be deprived of their income, lamented B. Mallika, Secretary, Edayar Veethi Salavai Thozhilalar Ani (Edayar Street Washer Men/Washer Women Front).

She said that for the past 200-odd years, more than 60 families on the street were engaged in the profession. In fact, the street had been named Washer Men/ Washer Women Street.

At present, the majority of those who used the Corporation’s facility were over 50 years of age and women.

The women get used clothes from lodges, houses and commercial establishments. After spending on soap/ detergent and others, the women earn a meagre amount which was way short of meeting household expenses.

If the Corporation were to auction the place, the highest bidder would then charge them for using the facility, which was unprecedented because the front had not heard of any civic body auctioning the place meant for washing clothes.

Plus, after paying the highest bidder the user charges, they would not be able to continue washing because their income would be dented.

It was unfair to deprive them of their income, Ms. Mallika said and added that already a portion of the washing place had been fenced and a commercial complex constructed.

She said that on behalf of the front, the members had petitioned the Collector M. Karunagaran on Monday. They had also petitioned Mayor S.M. Velusamy.

Corporation sources said that the civic body was ready to hand over the maintenance of the washing place to the very petitioners, provided they were ready to pay usage charges.

They added that the civic body was open to their grievances and was not interested in robbing them of their livelihood.

Ms. Mallika said that the women were ready to pay the charges fixed by the Corporation.

 

AMMA scheme for all wards

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The Hindu                      12.03.2013

AMMA scheme for all wards

Special Correspondent 

Mayor V.V. Rajan Chellappa has proposed Azhagia Madurai Maanagar (AMMA) Thittam to be implemented in all the 100 wards of Madurai Corporation with a one-time expenditure of Rs. 2 crore.

Under the scheme, 600 workers would be employed to take care of the basic services such as drinking water supply, underground drainage, removal of garbage, mosquito eradication and other works in the wards. One ward each in the four zones would be selected on a given day and 150 employees deployed there.

The workers would take up works to plug leakage in pipelines, patch up work to fill potholes on roads, construct damaged manholes, provide new water connections and take up maintenance works in Corporation schools and hospital buildings.

Lacklustre

The debate over the Madurai Corporation’s budget presented on Monday was lacklustre. While the absence of any major new schemes could have been a reason for the dull debate, it could also be that the councillors had no time to prepare for the debate as the budget copies were handed down at the last minute.

Budget copies are usually given four days in advance so that the councillors have the time to study its details.

The Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam members raised the issue and staged a walkout in protest. The lone Communist Party of India (Marxist) member, M. Chellam, too raked up the issue. Except for S. D. Jeyabalan, who spoke for a few minutes, councillors of the All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam, including zonal chairpersons and Standing Committee chairpersons spoke, for a couple of minutes.

Ms. Chellam asked the Mayor how she was expected to go through the details and deliberate on the budget. The Mayor responded saying that the AIADMK councillors were able to speak on it. He added that last year the budget copies were distributed at the last minute at the council hall.

While the AIADMK councillors welcomed the budget describing it as development-oriented, the party member, Kannagi Baskaran, wondered how the hike in the ward development fund to Rs. 10 lakh a year was going to benefit the members when the Rs. 5 lakh announced last year had not been disbursed.

The Mayor clarified that the fund would not be given to the councillor directly. Councillors would have to submit proposals for works to be taken up in their wards to the prescribed amount.

Ms. Chellam wanted the Corporation to start English medium schools to meet the growing aspirations of parents. On the demand for the local body to start a college, Mr. Chellappa said that the government had given permission to start only self-financing colleges.

“Without aid towards salary for the teaching and non-teaching staff, we cannot afford to have huge recurring expenditure. We have land and can also invest on the building infrastructure. But we can go ahead with the project only if we get aid from the government,” he said.

The meeting came to an end before 12 noon as not many councillors volunteered to speak.

Commissioner R. Nanthagopal and Deputy Mayor R. Gopalakrishnan were present.

 

Minister inspects solar toilets

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The Hindu                              07.03.2013

Minister inspects solar toilets

Staff Reporter 

Municipal administration and rural development minister K.P. Munusamy on Wednesday inspected the sensor and solar-based toilets installed on GST Road in Tambaram.

The inspection was part of efforts to review the possibility of expanding the pilot scheme to other local bodies across the city.

‘Namma toilets’, the State’s first such facilities, were recently installed at the junction of Duraiswamy Reddy Street and GST Road by the Tambaram municipality.

The toilet blocks have a stall each for elderly women and women with physical disabilities, one for men and another for women.

Officials of the Tambaram municipality said that on an average, about 800 people use the toilets daily.

The solar-powered lighting in the toilet stalls is synchronised with sensors that detect movement and switch on and off accordingly, thereby saving energy.

The project has proved successful, as it is located in an area close to a bus terminus, officials said.

The minister enquired about the eco-friendly measures adopted, and also looked at suggestions in the visitors’ book.

The Tambaram municipality has identified four areas, including Nehru Nagar, to install eight more units by the end of this month.

There are plans to take the project to other municipalities and corporations in the State as well, officials said.

Last Updated on Thursday, 07 March 2013 06:53
 


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