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Rain takes toll on normal life

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The Deccan Chronicle  07.12.2010

Rain takes toll on normal life

Chennai, Dec. 6: North Chennai reeled under rain and flood on Monday and traffic was disrupted for quite a while in the Vysarpadi Jeeva and Ganesapuram bridges.
The city corporation pressed into service about 150 motor pumps to drain the storm water and prevent traffic snarls. However the suburbs were not attended to, as the municipalities did not take up any work to clear the roads.
Ambattur and Avadi were the worst hit with battered roads, water logging and frequent power disruption that left residents cursing their fate. The mayor, Mr. M. Subramanian, visited the flood affected areas from early in the morning till late in the night.
“We got 10 centimetre rain in a short span without any halt leading to water logging,” he told reporters after inspecting north Chennai.
The field staff has fanned out to low lying areas and so far food were served to about 70,000 people, he said.
Meanwhile thousands of passengers were stranded at various railway stations in the Chennai Beach – Chengalpattu section.
At least 20 trains including express and suburban services were disrupted on Monday morning because of the rains and the passengers were caught unawares.
Railway employees used motor pumps to remove storm water from the main line which had been inundated. The express trains were diverted through the suburban lines because of this.
In a bid to help the stranded passengers, the railways also converted the super fast EMU trains in to normal trains so that the locomotives can halt at all stations.
A senior corporation official said special squads were monitoring the city round-the-clock and more than 17 avenue trees that uprooted were cleared within two hours.
“We are coordinating with the fire service and the city police,” he said. “Fibre boats and community centres are being kept ready to rescue and accommodate people in case of emergency.”

Last Updated on Tuesday, 07 December 2010 05:36
 

Manual scavenging continues despite ban

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The Deccan Chronicle  06.12.2010

Manual scavenging continues despite ban

Coimbatore, Dec. 5: Despite the High Court banning manual removal of sewage blocks two years ago, the Coimbatore Corporation has not fully complied with the order.
Though the civic body recently purchased three new vehicles for `53.5 lakh to clear blocked sewers, workers are still being forced to clean manholes and sewerage lines manually. “Most of the times the suction tube of the vehicle can be fitted only by getting into the drain. The silt and sewage also has to be taken out manually from the manholes,” said a 37-year-old labourer.
In addition, the labourers who have to enter the sewer lines to remove blockages do not wear any kind of safety gear. “We feel uneasy and completely breathless while wearing a mask and working in a drain. So we prefer not to wear them,” said a worker.
As recently as two days back, labourers had to get down a drain and manually remove blockages at Uppara Street as machines did not work out there. “Though the civic body bought the machines after the court ordered a ban on deployment of conservancy workers to clean sewers, it is not serving the purpose,” said another labourer.
Garkey, an advocate who fights for the cause of labourers, said it was the responsibility of the authorities to ensure that no humans were allowed inside the drain. “And they need to clear the blocks only with mechanical devices, however the officials never turn up to monitor the work,” he said.
When contacted, a corporation official said sanitary workers had been instructed not to go down the drains to clean sewer blocks. He added that he would look into the issue to ensure that the workers strictly abided by the rules and regulations of the court. “I was not aware of workers removing the sewer blocks manually at Uppara Street. The civic body has plans to deploy one suction vehicle to each of the four zones to remove blocks,” he said.

Last Updated on Monday, 06 December 2010 06:36
 

Technically challenged councillors do not use assigned emails

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The Hindu      06.12.2010

Technically challenged councillors do not use assigned emails

Karthik Madhavan
— PHOTO: S. SIVA SARAVANAN

Corporation's effort to make Councillors tech-savy has not taken off.

COIMBATORE: The Coimbatore Corporation wants its councillors to be tech-savvy in dealing with their constituency and has assigned them email addresses. But the effort to make them keep pace with the times has not borne fruit. Why?

Provide training

Explains C. Sivakami, Councillor, Ward 17: “In the first instance, most of us are not aware that we have email addresses to reach out to the public. Even if we know about such a facility, we are not e-enabled. Councillors like me do not know how to access mails. The civic body should have trained us and not stopped with just assigning mail addresses.”

P. Shobana of Ward 4, concurs. “Councillors being e-challenged is the reason,” she says. Her guesstimate is that more than 60 of the 72 councillors have not accessed their mails since it was assigned four years ago.

A tech-savvy councillor, she regularly uses the facility but hardly gets mails from the public.

“Initially, people were mailing me, maybe for a couple of months. Now I don't get mails.”

No response

Ms. Shobana explains that using emails also depends on public response. “If people are not responding through email, what is the use of having an email address at all?” There was a proposal to train councillors, she agrees, but that did not materialise.

Asked about the problem, Anshul Mishra, Corporation Commissioner, said the civic body had trained its entire staff and most of the internal communication was done electronically.

The councillors would be trained shortly. Since the general public still preferred to submit their petitions as hardcopy, the councillors hardly had any incentive to learn to use emails, he admitted.

 


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