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“New building for the old vegetable market”

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The Hindu      08.12.2010

“New building for the old vegetable market”

Staff Reporter
350 shops, yard for loading, unloading to come up
— PHOTO: G. KARTHIKEYAN

Over to a new location:The rain-hit Gandhi wholesale vegetable market in Dindigul to get a new building.

DINDIGUL: Gandhi wholesale vegetable market near Rock Fort, the oldest market in the town, would soon function in a new building as the municipality has plans to construct a new market at an estimated cost of Rs.4.5 crore. Sufficient open area to load and unload vegetables would also be provided, said R. Natarajan, Chairman, Dindigul Municipality.

He said here on Tuesday that 350 shops would be set up and a separate yard for loading and unloading would also be established. Sufficient space would be provided for movement of trucks.

An open site, which was used as lorry parking bay on Dindigul-Palani Highway near Sakthi Talkies would be utilised for construction of new complex, he added.

The existing market area near the Rock Fort would be transformed into a playground and a children's park.

A cement podium, where Gandhi addressed the gathering in the town before Independence, would be retained, Mr. Natarajan said.

The municipality would also shift the lorry shed to the existing garbage dumping yard near Muruga Bhavanam on Dindigul-Palani Highway. Another site on Batlagundu-Dindigul bypass had been identified for dumping municipal wastes.

To a question on renovation of roads, the chairman said relaying of TNEB Colony Road would commence tomorrow.

Relaying of Race Course Road, popularly known as Ring Road, had commenced on Saturday. Since the rain had stopped, the municipality would expedite laying of interior roads.

With the completion of underground drainage project, residents, with no drinking water and drainage connection so far, may apply for new connections to the municipality within five days. The underground drainage and drinking water connection would be given immediately.

They may contact the chairman or the municipal commissioner for further details. This facility is available only to the areas where the underground drainage work was over.

Hitting hard on CPI(M), who frequently staged protests against the delay in renovation of roads, the chairman asked the Dindigul MLA, K. Balabarathi, not to politicise the work delay, caused due to natural calamities for petty political gains.

 

Corpn. has to submit fresh proposal

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The Hindu  01.12.2010

Corpn. has to submit fresh proposal

K.V. Prasad

To complete sewage treatment plant at Nanjundapuram
File photo: k. ananthan

Wasted effort?A view of the sewage treatment plant on Nanjundapuram Road in the city. –

COIMBATORE: The Coimbatore Corporation will have to submit a fresh proposal to the Tamil Nadu Pollution Control Board in order to complete the sewage treatment plant at Nanjundapuram. The implication is that the Corporation has to dismantle whatever it has put up so far at the site.

The call for the fresh proposal follows a hearing conducted by the board in Chennai. The hearing was ordered by the High Court while disposing of a petition from the residents near the site, seeking restraint on the Corporation from putting up the plant. The residents said the plant would be too close to their house and therefore pose health hazards. They wanted it shifted to some other site.

Changes

After hearing both sides, the board said the Corporation should revise the proposal for the plant, incorporating the changes suggested by a committee of experts that studied the construction of the plant so far, the issues raised by residents and matters relating to pollution control norms.

Everything now depends on what kind of a response the Corporation comes up with, in regard to changing the plan with which it has gone about putting up the plant, official sources in the pollution control board say. The sources say the Corporation had not got its consent for establishing the plant.

The board will study the fresh proposal. If it is convinced that the norms are being met, the board will clear the project. At present, the plant structure is close to human habitations. The residents claim that it is around 15 ft from their houses. The board officials say the Corporation has to leave a buffer zone between the houses and the plant.

The sources also indicate that if the Corporation has to rework the project, including the layout plan, 60 per cent to 70 per cent of the structure already put up will have to be dismantled.

This, in turn, means that a large amount of funds spent so far is as good as having done down the drain.

Apart from the plant at Nanjundapuram, the Corporation is establishing one at Ukkadam. Both the plants are vital components of the civic body's Rs.377-crore underground drainage scheme under implementation.

The scheme's completion and proper drainage disposal hinges on the completion of the Nanjundapuram project.

Coimbatore Corporation Commissioner Anshul Mishra says the sewage treatment plant project is not under any threat and that it will be implemented.

The Corporation is working on the fresh suggestions made by the pollution control board to meet the norms.

The residents wonder how two different rules can be applied to similar types of projects. When the Corporation has gone by the rule that the treatment plant should be more than 800 ft from human habitation at Ukkadam, why was it not applied to Nanjudapuram project, they ask. The residents want the plant project shifted to Vellalore, where the Corporation has a sewage farm.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 01 December 2010 09:12
 

Corpn. buys new equipment to clean sewers

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The Hindu      26.11.2010

Corpn. buys new equipment to clean sewers

Staff Reporter
To better implementation of UGD scheme


Useful:Mayor R. Venkatachalam (second left) flags off new automated jetting-cum-suction equipment for removing blocks in drainage in the city. Corporation Commissioner Anshul Mishra (left) is in the picture.

COIMBATORE: The Coimbatore Corporation armed itself with three new vehicles to clear choked sewers and pump out water from low-level areas.

Anshul Mishra, Commissioner, said the civic body had bought a jetting-cum-suction lorry and two suction lorries at Rs. 53.5 lakh.

The jetting-cum-suction lorry would flush water with heavy force into the chocked area in sewers and manholes. The suction vehicles would pump out water, sullage and sewage from low-level areas, roads, etc.

Mr. Mishra said the civic body bought the vehicles to better the implementation of the underground drainage (UGD) scheme.

At present, the civic body had a vehicle which catered to the needs of the 23 wards that were covered by the UGD scheme. The wards had 3,000 manholes and 24 km of sewerage.

The Commissioner also said that the civic body went in for the machines after the Supreme Court ordered ban on deployment of conservancy workers to clean sewers.

The new machines' usefulness would be felt once the Corporation extended the UGD scheme to all the 72 wards. Then the number of manholes would go up to 20,000 and sewerage lines to 650 km.

A Corporation official said the machines would be able to clear small block within three hours and big ones in six hours.

 


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