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Rainwater ‘locks’ residents of Madipakkam

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The New Indian Express  10.12.2010

Rainwater ‘locks’ residents of Madipakkam

CHENNAI: The rains might have eased, but not the woes of residents in certain areas of Madipakkam, as rainwater continued to stagnate in the neighbourhood, affecting their everyday routine.

Several pockets of Ram Nagar North, Srinivasa Nagar and nearby Sivaprakasa Nagar continue to battle the aftermath of the recent rains in Madipakkam, falling under the Ullagaram-Puzhuthivakkam municipality limits.

M Murugan, a resident of Tirugnanasambandar Street, whose house had been surrounded by stagnant rainwater, rued that even getting out of his residence required a painstaking effort. “For children, who have to attend school, it is even more difficult. They have become more susceptible to infections as they wade through the knee-deep water,” he said.

According to K Ganesan of Annai Teresa Nagar, water-logging on the streets and the bad road conditions had made motoring a problem. “The roads here, in the interiors, have always been bad. The rains have worsened it. Even reaching the nearby Ramalinga Nagar bus stop is back-breaking,” he said.

Lack of storm water drains and clogged or encroached traditional outlets, to dispose floodwater in the Pallikaranai marshland, have made the rain water to stagnate in the neighbourhood, putting the residents to inconvenience.

According to municipal authorities, action was being taken to pump out the stagnant water. “We cannot do anything regarding stagnation on vacant plots. Drains have been cleaned up using loaders to allow the floodwaters to reach the nearby Veerangal canal,” an official said.

In reply to a question on the bad condition of the roads, he said that pucca roads could be built only after the completion of the work on the underground drainage, likely to commence soon. However, new roads were being laid in many places, considering the inconvenience faced by local residents, he added.

Last Updated on Friday, 10 December 2010 11:53
 

27 unauthorised buildings sealed, 6,500 more to go

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The Times of India         10.12.2010

27 unauthorised buildings sealed, 6,500 more to go

CHENNAI: At least 27 buildings have been sealed by the Chennai Metropolitan Development Authority (CMDA) in the Chennai metropolitan area during the last three years for development violations. Going by official records, the agency has a long way to go — it is learnt that at least 6,438 new buildings that have cropped up during the same period have violated development control rules.

The shocking revelation was made in a report submitted at a meeting of a HC-appointed monitoring committee at the CMDA office on Wednesday. The report said 9,816 residential buildings, 698 commercial buildings, 20 institutional ones and 66 industries had been inspected by the CMDA, Chennai corporation and various other bodies. Violations range from unauthorised additional floors, lack of setback and irregularities concerning usage, floor space index and parking norms. Incidentally, barring the CMDA, none of the local bodies has shown interest in taking any action.

These structures have come up after July 27, 2007, the day an ordinance was passed to regularise structures violating rules and built prior to that date.

"Enforcement has wholly collapsed. Agencies like CMDA and corporation are helpless when major violators are protected by the government, which has even gone to the extent of issuing ordinances and enacting laws," said MG Devasahayam, former IAS officer and member of the panel constituted by HC to look into unauthorised structures.

Most of the unauthorised buildings are in areas such as George Town, T Nagar, Mylapore, Tiruvanmiyur where old settlements are giving way to new multi-storied buildings. Large-scale violations have also been found in areas like Saidapet, Chetpet and southern suburbs such as Kottivakkam and residential colonies in Alandur municipality where the real estate industry is booming unlike never before. "These 10,600 buildings are only the tip of an iceberg. There must be more than a lakh such illegal buildings, which are still unidentified," government sources told TOI.

A study by the Chennai Corporation and CMDA in 2007 — following directions from the monitoring committee — in Usman Road (from Usman Road to Prakasam Salai) and Ranganathan Street revealed that 64 buildings (28 special buildings (beyond three floors) and 35 multi-storeyed buildings) have blatantly violated rules on floor space index, plot coverage, car parking and front set-back. A multi-storyed building, bearing door no. 43 in Ranganathan Street ought to have provided 90 slots for four wheelers as per development control rules. But the builder has not set aside space to park even a single car.

The floor space index (FSI) of several of these identified buildings have gone beyond 5, even as the rules permit only 2.5. FSI is the ratio between the built-up area allowed and plot area available. "In fact, the monitoring committee was contemplating stringent action against these offenders when the state brought out an ordinance in July 2007 under the pretext of safeguarding the poor people. There is no fear of law and everyone is violating the rule. It is detrimental to the quality of urban life," Devasahayam said. The Supreme Court in its 2006 ruling observed that Chennai was unlivable due to flourishing unauthorised buildings.

Interestingly, the corporation has given a clean chit to certain special and multi-storeyed buildings on Arcot Road that they identified as violating rules. The corporation has told the state government that they could not find deviations in 20 of those buildings indentified. A senior government official said, "At least 90% of the buildings have deviations and any planner can easily figure out the violations".

 

Building norm violations continue

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The Hindu           09.12.2010

Building norm violations continue

Staff Reporter

“This is mainly on account of the lack of appropriate enforcement mechanism''


CHENNAI: Violations of norms in buildings constructed in the Chennai Metropolitan Area continue to be reported after July 2007 on account of the constraints in enforcement.

Of the 4,156 building constructions that were surveyed in Chennai Corporation limits from July 27, 2007, a total of 1,753 were issued stop work notice, according to the spokesperson of the Monitoring Committee M. G. Devasahayam.

This is mainly on account of the lack of appropriate enforcement mechanism, he added.

Tamil Nadu government, on July 27, 2007 promulgated an ordinance, valid for a year, seeking to suspend any punitive action against unauthorised construction with respect to structures in the Chennai Metropolitan Planning Area that were completed before July 27, 2007. The date was declared as the cut-off date for a moratorium on punitive action.

According to a senior official of the Chennai Metropolitan Development Authority, the enforcement was being carried out periodically but the number of officials was not adequate. The planning body would also urge the heads of department of local bodies in the CMA to take efforts towards enforcement.

Mr. Devasahayam said that there is no reduction in the number of violations after 2007. A total of 3,367 buildings were surveyed in the same period in municipality limits and 3,160 received stop work notice.

In town panchayat areas, 1,658 buildings were surveyed, of which 1,132 got stop work notice.

A total of six buildings received stop work notice, out of the 1,032 surveyed in panchayat union areas in the same period.

 


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