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Urban Planning

Site, building plan approvals trouble added area residents

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The Hindu          28.12.2011

Site, building plan approvals trouble added area residents

Karthik Madhavan

Civic body urged to address the issue

Until they became a part of the Coimbatore Corporation, most of those who purchased plots in unapproved layouts and constructed houses had a good time.

For, with the help of the local body concerned they obtained both, site and building plan approval. Not only that they also managed to have water supply connection, road and street lights, again thanks to the local body. That the Directorate of Town and Country Planning (DTCP) did not approve of those layouts did not bother either the plot owners or the local body.

Now those who purchase plots and construct houses in such locations are in for trouble, as the Coimbatore Corporation will not grant approvals for such unapproved layouts. Those in such layouts will not be able to get building plan or in ensuring basic amenities, as the Corporation would not be able to spend on such layouts. “Many people who purchased plots but are yet to take up construction are at a loss to know what needs to be done,” says S. Martin, a builder who is into housing.

Without the Corporation's building plan approval, those people will not be able to avail of housing loan from banks. But that will come through only when the site is approved, he says and wants the Corporation to address the issue. There are a second category of people who are also facing trouble: those who had constructed houses on unapproved sites with the local body approval and want to take up additional construction. “The houses, though on unapproved sites, have been constructed with the local body approval. Technically they are on unapproved sites,” he says and wants to know if the Corporation will accord approval for such additional construction.

The fate of street lights and roads also seems to hang fire. “Just because they are on unapproved layouts, will the Corporation not maintain them,” asks Ward 33 councillor J. Mohan Ranganathan. He represents Kalapatti, where the problem exists.

What the councillor asks is true of all the added areas of the Coimbatore Corporation.

Sources in the Corporation say that for the civic body to grant any new approval, the site must have the DTCP approval. As far as the road and street light maintenance are concerned, the civic body can take care as they have been handed over by the local body concerned as its property.

The Corporation can do nothing about it and the government must not regularise such layouts, says K. Kathirmathiyon, Secretary, Coimbatore Consumer Cause.

But the civic body must maintain the existing infrastructure, he adds.

 

Erode Corporation to seek Rs. 90 crore more to expand UGD project

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The Hindu          27.12.2011

Erode Corporation to seek Rs. 90 crore more to expand UGD project

S. Ramesh

The Erode Corporation will seek around Rs. 90 crore additionally from the State government to expand its underground drainage (UGD) project to two town panchayats and five village panchayats that have been added to its limits recently.

The B.P. Agraharam and Suriyampalayam town panchayats and the nearby Thindal, Villarasampatti, Gangapuram, Muthampalayam and Ellapalayam villages were merged with the Corporation, taking the total number of wards in the civic body to 60.

The government had earlier sanctioned over Rs. 200 crore for the implementation of the project for Erode town (former municipal areas) and four municipalities – Surampatty, Veerappan Chatram, Periya Semur and Kasipalayam. These municipalities were also merged with the Corporation recently.

“We now have to lay sewage pipelines to cover the areas that fall under the two town panchayats and five village panchayats. We will be preparing a detailed project report to cover the added areas in the UGD project and submit it to the government. It is likely to cost us around Rs. 90 crore,” Corporation sources said. The Corporation has divided the project under five packages and works listed under Package I and III are being implemented currently. Package IV is under review with the tender award committee. The Corporation council has postponed its decision on selecting the contractors for the execution of Package II and V. “If the government sanctions more fund, we will be creating Package VI and place it before the council for approval,” the sources said.

 

Underground drainage scheme to be over by February

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The Hindu           20.12.2011

Underground drainage scheme to be over by February

M. Balaganessin

Underground drainage scheme is expected to be completed by February and the Tamil Nadu Water Supply and Drainage (TWAD) Board has evolved a design for linking the domestic sewage with the drainage channel.

The facility, being implemented on an outlay of Rs.31.91 crore, has sewer lines to a cumulative length of 92 km. A total of 3,428 manholes would be set up, linking 10,344 domestic connections. The TWAD Board has constructed two pumping stations — one each in Aranarai and on Vilamathur road; the main pumping station at Thuraimangalam; and a sewage treatment plant at Neduvasal. “The TWAD Board has evolved a certain design for linking the domestic sewage with the collecting pipelines and preliminary tests for ascertaining the gradient of the sewage system for ensuring the smooth flow of the sewerage is being taken up,” said Collector Darez Ahmed.

Accompanied by Municipal Chairman Ramesh, the Collector inspected the pumping stations and the treatment plant site. Municipal Commissioner B.V. Surendra Sha said that a proposal for extending the facility to new residential areas had also been taken up at an estimate of Rs.8 crore under the Integrated Urban Development Mission (IUDM).

 


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