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2,000 more garbage bins for city soon

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The Hindu   02.08.2012

2,000 more garbage bins for city soon

Staff Reporter

Many residential neighbourhoods in the city are soon to have new garbage bins. The Chennai Corporation will soon procure 2,000 bins for locations where garbage is being dumped on the street.

The finalisation of the tender and the arrival of the bins are likely to add momentum to Chennai Corporation’s plan to gradually restore the bins to the original position in many places following opposition from residents to the creation of enclosures.

Mayor’s brainchild

The garbage bin enclosure project, a brain child of Mayor Saidai S. Duraisamy, was to be implemented at 1,293 locations in seven zones in the old corporation limits. Work was completed in many of the locations at an estimated cost of Rs.4.35 crore.

The proposal involved grouping garbage bins and the civic body had started installing blue corrugated iron sheets to cover garbage bins all over the city. The bins were proposed to be accessible only to the tricycle men and compactor helpers in the area. But ragpickers, dogs and cattle continue to have access to the covered bins and this has emerged a stumbling block to keeping the area around the bins clean.

At every location, between five and 10 bins have been placed.

Hindrance to Ramky

The Corporation’s new system has also hindered the normal functioning of the private conservancy operator Ramky Enviro Engineers in Adyar, Teynampet and Kodambakkam zones.

Over 6,000 bins in the old corporation limits were relocated as part of the project. However, residents in some areas have been objecting to the grouping of bins as stench is unbearable with garbage from nearby commercial establishments being dumped in many such enclosures.

The bin enclosure project was to be implemented at 1,293 locations but ran into resistance

Last Updated on Thursday, 02 August 2012 05:28
 

100 pushcarts to give push to collection of garbage

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The Hindu   01.08.2012

100 pushcarts to give push to collection of garbage

Special Correspondent

Red and green:New pushcarts and buckets acquired by Tiruchi Corporation.— PHOTO:R.M. RAJARATHINAM
 
Red and green:New pushcarts and buckets acquired by Tiruchi Corporation.— PHOTO:R.M. RAJARATHINAM

Tiruchi Corporation has acquired 400 buckets and 100 pushcarts for its sanitary workers to carry out their day-to-day task of collecting garbage in the city.

The buckets and the pushcarts were handed over to sanitary workers by Mayor A.Jaya in the presence of V.P.Thandapani, Corporation Commissioner, Asick Meera, Deputy Mayor, and elected representatives of the Corporation here on Tuesday.

According to a Corporation press release, the buckets and puscharts were purchased at a cost of Rs.10.74 lakhs under the Integrated Urban Development Programme for improving solid waste management in the city. The buckets of 50 litres capacity were purchased at a cost of Rs.2.29 lakhs and the non-corrosive pushcarts at a cost of Rs.8.45 lakhs. The four zones were allotted 25 pushcarts each. The Mayor also disclosed that Corporation was taking steps to provide safety gear to sanitary workers at a cost of Rs.18 lakhs.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 01 August 2012 10:06
 

Civic body to revive Yanaikulam project

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The Hindu    01.08.2012

Civic body to revive Yanaikulam project

S.Ganesan

To go in for out of court settlement with contractor to resume work on commercial complex

free for all:Councillors speaking at the corporation council meeting in the city on Tuesday. —PHOTO:R.M. RAJARATHINAM
free for all:Councillors speaking at the corporation council meeting in the city on Tuesday. —PHOTO:R.M. RAJARATHINAM

 Decks have been cleared for the resumption of construction of a commercial complex at Yanaikulam grounds near Singarathope in the city with the corporation council on Tuesday approving a proposal to go in for an out of court settlement with the contractor of the project.

The project taken up from Municipal Urban Development Fund has been in limbo over the past two decades after the contract was awarded in 1991 by the erstwhile Tiruchi municipality. The work was halted after the foundation was raised in a portion of the project area after it was discovered that the site had rocky sediments, requiring a specialised foundation structure. A subsequent investigation by a private agency had suggested that the corporation go in for under reamed pile foundation.

The contractor had refused to execute the work within the project estimate of Rs.110 lakh and demanded an increase in the estimate by 25 per cent and extension of the contract period by 12 months without any penalty. The contractor took to legal recourse after the demands were rejected by the Directorate of Municipal Administration.

Even as the litigation prolonged for years, there have been widespread demands from elected representatives and service organisations in the city seeking the revival of the project as a revenue generating measure for the civic body. The Minister for Municipal Administration and Rural Development had also announced in the Assembly recently that steps would be taken to construct the commercial complex.

An agreement was reached during talks between the corporation and representatives of the contractor in recent months, according to an official resolution tabled at an urgent meeting of the corporation council chaired by Mayor A.Jaya on Tuesday. The contractor had agreed to withdraw the cases provided the corporation refunded his deposit and allowed him to enrol again as a registered contractor. The corporation would refund the deposit after deducting the cost of the cement and other raw materials that he was supposed to have handed over to the civic body.

The corporation would now prepare revised estimates and call for fresh tenders to revive the project. M.Mohamed Mustafa of Marumalarchi Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam and J.Srinivasan of All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam welcomed the decision and urged the Corporation to resume the work at the earliest.

Later at an ordinary meeting, a cross-section of DMK councillors complained over the mobilisation of sanitary staff from the wards for the mass cleaning campaign taken up at the initiative of Commissioner V.P.Thandapani. They claimed that the campaign was not effective but only deprived them of sanitary workers at the wards in the evening hours. Mr.Thandapani countered the argument saying that the campaign was being conducted successfully wherever councillors had utilised the opportunity well. A section of councillors also complained of drinking water short supply owing to problems in filling up the overhead drinking water tank at Marakkadai.

The council also witnessed a brief wrangling between DMK and AIADMK members after DMK member Muthuselvam alleged that no development work was underway in his ward. The AIADMK members contended that Rs.65 lakh worth of works were underway in his ward. Even as the councillors were engaged in a tussle, the Mayor adjourned the meeting sine die after passing the resolutions hurriedly. The DMK members trooped out of the council hall and raised slogans against the corporation.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 01 August 2012 10:03
 


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