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Wait for completion of drainage project continues

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The Times of India 01.09.2009

Wait for completion of drainage project continues

CHENNAI: In 1999, Sathyanathan of Vijayalakshmipuram in Ambattur remitted Rs 7,500 to the municipality towards a underground drainage connection. He is still waiting. So are hundreds of others.

The scheme, for which the Ambattur municipality laid the foundation stone in a bid to provide drainage facility in 19 of its 52 wards in March 2001 during the previous DMK regime, is now, according to sources, one of the longest-delayed projects of the present government.

The civic body has collected Rs 8.14 crore Rs 7,500 each from over 11,500 households so far but has not even completed 50% of the work.

While many resident welfare associations in Ambattur staged demonstrations and road-rokos, several residents chose to file applications under the Right To Information (RTI) Act seeking to know when the project will be completed. All to no avail. The Government Taxes and Bills Payers' Association took up the issue with the Tamil Nadu State Information Commission as the municipality's reply to its RTI application was not satisfactory.

"We want the personal intervention of chief minister M Karunanidhi, to ensure the completion of the project without further delay and to make the municipality pay interest for the deposits it collected,'' said Muthukumar, a resident.

In its reply to an RTI application filed by this reporter, the municipality said the contract was originally awarded to Nagarjuna Constructions and that the work began only in November 2004. The contract was ended in May 2007 as the contractor quoted 120% above the estimate for the balance works and the project was given to the Chennai Metropolitan Water Supply and Sewerage Board (CMWSSB). Stating that works worth Rs 15.30 crore had been completed so far, the municipality said the delay was due to the monsoon, elections, change of location of pumping and lifing stations, public objection in some areas and change of alignment of the Chennai bypass.

Meanwhile, the municipality took up another drainage project at an estimated cost of Rs 155 crore, to be implemented in 24 wards under the Jawaharlal Nehru Urban Renewal Mission (JNNURM) scheme.

 

Will a bigger civic body improve management?

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The Hindu 01.09.2009

Will a bigger civic body improve management?

A. Srivathsan and Aloysius Xavier Lopez

Some officials are of opinion that any further increase in size of Chennai Corporation will be unwieldy

— Photo: N. Sridharan

ROAD AHEAD: The proposed expansion of the municipal limits of Chennai will offer both challenges and opportunities.

CHENNAI: From a small city with 5 lakh population spread over 71 sq.km in 1919, Chennai has now spread to 174 sq.km with a population of about 4.3 million (as per 2001 census). The population is only expected to grow further and reach 5.8 million by 2026. Will the extent of the city also grow along with it? Will a bigger city corporation ensure better management and planning of civic amenities?

What is the optimum size of the city is a question that remains unanswered . Should it be big enough to take advantage of the economies of scale, mobilise resources and be fit to compete with other larger cities for better ranking and funding.

A senior official of the CMDA said, “We want Chennai to be ranked higher among all the cities in the country in all aspects of an urban area. A largest possible area for the newly delineated greater Chennai will be one of the better options.”

On the other hand, should the city’s size be small enough to ensure better management, improve political representation and participation, and escape the ill effects of congestion and over crowding. There has not been a single prescription that fits all the cities.

In order to address some of these issues, the government of Tamil Nadu had a few years ago set up a committee to examine the possible delineation of new corporations.

The alternatives recommended by this committee were put up for public consultations in 2008 and early 2009.

The committee, in its final recommendation submitted on August 18, asked the State government to choose either a greater Chennai Corporation spread over an area of 800 sq.km similar to the large city corporations of Hyderabad (650 sq.km) and Bangalore (700 sq.km) or expand the city to a limited size of 420 sq.km and create two new Corporations with Avadi and Tambaram as headquarters.

The second option includes municipalities such as Ambattur and Alandur and the expanded Chennai will have Semancheri as its southern limit and Tiruvottiyur and Kathivakkam as its northern limit.

The other two corporations, Chennai-Avadi and Chennai-Tambaram would cover about 150 sq.km and 200 sq.km respectively.

Niranjan Mardi, Principal Secretary, Municipal Administration and Water Supply Department, said, “The increase in area of the municipal corporation limit or the creation of new corporations on the outskirts will improve the infrastructure of the outlying areas. It would also lead to more coordination of massive infrastructure projects in various parts of the suburbs.”

He further added that the “people on the suburbs are entitled to better service delivery and the final decision would certainly respond to this.”

Another important reason behind the proposal to create new corporations, as one government official explained, is that the fragmented local bodies will not be helpful in generating funds for investment and will not have the viable population size to implement projects such as upgraded water supply and sewage network. The government, he added, is inclined towards bigger size with larger resource base.

Some officials are of the opinion that any further increase in the size of Chennai Corporation will be unwieldy and cannot be managed. They add that “the costs are high and increasing the size further would lead to inefficiency.”

One of the challenges would be the issue of representation. The merger of local bodies would bring down the number of elected representatives and those who have been functioning independently as chairman would have to function as councillors.

There is also a third view which does not find mention in the report. A few government officials think that the poor state of suburbs is due to the failure of regional plan and the lack of adequate investment in the suburbs. Hence, expanding the limits of the city is not a good answer, they said.

However, creating local bodies for the sole purpose of making them creditworthy and thereby obtain more funds would not do them good in the long run. In the short term it may enhance property values, but issues of poor resource base will certainly affect their operation, the officials said. A well developed city such as Chennai needs less capital expenditure while the new ones will need large investments that will serve relatively lower density of population.

In the public consultations on the delineation held, in Ambattur and Tambaram, residents from the suburbs expressed that they were ready to embrace the idea of more corporations. Some even demanded that instead of three corporations, five be set up.

This proposal, for many, is an opportunity to get better services. However, what is now proposed was not among the options that were discussed.

The various contesting viewpoints of experts are under government’s consideration. Whatever be the decision the priority would be to make Chennai a better city in terms of solid waste management, infrastructure and delivery of services, according to Mr. Mardi.

Last Updated on Tuesday, 01 September 2009 00:24
 

Size of Chennai city set to expand

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The Hindu 26.08.2009

Size of Chennai city set to expand

A. Srivathsan

Committee has recommended two options to government

CHENNAI: The size of Chennai city is set to expand manifold. Whether it will enlarge from its present extent of 176 sq.km. to become a mega city of 800 sq.km area or it will be a relatively smaller expansion to encompass about 420 sq.km area is a decision that the government of Tamil Nadu will soon take.

Report

The committee, constituted to examine the proposal for delineating new city Corporations around Chennai city, has recommended two options to the State government and submitted the report on August 18.

The first option recommends a greater Chennai Corporation that will administer an area of 800 sq.km and is based on the study of other large city corporations such as Hyderabad and Bangalore which are spread over an area of about 650 and 700 sq.km respectively.

This expanded Corporation will incorporate various municipalities and other local bodies within the Chennai Metropolitan Area (1189 sq.km).

The second option is to expand the present city to a size of 420 sq.km and in addition, create two Corporations with Avadi and Tambaram as headquarters.

In this proposal, the existing municipalities such as Ambattur and Alandur would be merged with the Chennai Corporation and Semancheri would be the southern limit and Thiruvottiyur and Kathivakkam the northern limit of the city.

The Chennai-Avadi Corporation would cover about 150 sq.km extending up to Poonamallee.

The Chennai-Tambaram Corporation would cover about 200 sq.km extending up to Vandalur.

Both these options were not amongst the alternatives that were discussed at public consultation meetings held in 2008 and 2009, but have been arrived at as a result of the discussions, say a government source.

The purpose behind this restructuring, as stated by the government, is to create ‘higher order local bodies’ that will deliver better public services, generate more resources and facilitate private public partnerships to undertake new infrastructure projects.

The State government also expects that this restructuring will optimise expenditure and improve administration.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 26 August 2009 04:39
 


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