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Sewerage network: uncertainty over funds

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The Hindu        06.01.201   

Sewerage network: uncertainty over funds

Uncertainty over funds under the Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission (JNNURM) has put a spanner on Kerala Water Authority’s efforts to provide sewerage connectivity to all households in the city. The water utility was planning to get more than Rs.500 crore under phase –II of JNNURM to provide sewerage connectivity to so far uncovered areas.

A senior KWA official said the uncertainty over continuation of JNNURM scheme had become a cause of concern as 60 per cent of the works were to be taken up in the second phase of the project. Officials said external funding was essential for completing the project. Now, only 30 per cent of the city is covered by the sewerage network. The network that exists now is for Block A (covering most parts of the Secretariat, Palayam, Thampanoor, Vazhuthacaud, Thycaud etc.); Block B (mostly parts of Kuravankonam, Nanthancode, Kannammoola, Pettah, Vanchiyoor, Chala, Kuriyathy etc.); Block C (parts of Fort, Manacaud, Sreevarahom, Attukal, Ambalathara, Chakka etc.); Block D (Pattom, Goureesapattom, Kesavadasapuram, Muttada etc.); and Block E (parts of Poojappura, Mudavanmugal, Sasthamangalam, Pangode, Kowdiar etc.).

The 107-mld capacity Sewage Treatment Plant at Muttathara is treating only 37 mld sewage now.

 

Local bodies urged to provide facilities to safai karamcharis

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The Hindu         06.01.2015 

Local bodies urged to provide facilities to safai karamcharis

Chairperson of the Karnataka State Commissionfor Safai Karamcharis Narayan duringa review meeting in Udupi on Monday.
Chairperson of the Karnataka State Commissionfor Safai Karamcharis Narayan duringa review meeting in Udupi on Monday.

Narayan, Chairperson of the Karnataka State Commission for Safai Karamcharis, said said that safai karmacharis working in urban local bodies in Udupi district should be provided all facilities allotted to them by the State Government.

Chairing a review meeting of local bodies at the Deputy Commissioner’s Office here on Monday, he said that not just civic workers but waste-collectors and those who engaged in road construction are safai karamcharis and their salaries should be paid on time.

The local bodies should ensure that contractors provide Provident Fund and ESI facilities and those who do not should be blacklisted and their Earnest Money Deposit confiscated, he said.

He directed officials to construct houses for safai karamcharis and provide education and education scholarships to their children and he wanted a survey of the families of safai karmacharis to be done.

He said that legal action would be taken against officials and contractors who make safai karamcharis clean open manholes and they would be arrested and fined Rs. 2 lakh. Instead, the urban local bodies should use sucking equipment to clean open manholes.

 

Venkaiah for higher taxes to fund urban amenities

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The Hindu      06.01.2015   

Venkaiah for higher taxes to fund urban amenities

Union Minister for Urban Development M. Venkaiah Naidu on Monday suggested that municipal bodies increase taxes once in three years to meet the rising cost of better amenities.

The bodies could follow the Singapore model wherein people had to pay to travel on a particular road and to possess more than one vehicle, the Minister suggested. The aim was to decongest roads. “Taking hard decisions for a better future is essential,” he said, speaking at the first consultative workshop on urban governance here. The municipal commissioners and senior officials of the Urban Development Departments of Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Telangana and Andhra Pradesh and the Union Territory of Puducherry took part in the workshop.

Mr. Naidu asked the municipal commissioners to prepare the people for reforms to make urban life more comfortable. He said he was agitated at the “poor shape” of urban governance in the country. Reforms and accountability must be built into the system, and people must be made to pay taxes. The Central and State governments would give funds but the municipal bodies must develop their own resources.

“The habit of looking up to government for everything should stop.”

Mr Naidu hinted at the introduction of a credit rating system for the municipal bodies.People must be told about the fiscal health of the civic bodies. In Vijayawada, for example, taxes had not been revised for the past 12 years, he pointed out.

At present, a third of the population was living in urban areas, and this figure would increase in the coming years. About 63 per cent of the GDP came from cities, and it would rise to 75 per cent by 2030. Toilet coverage in the country was at a poor 40 per cent and sewerage 16 per cent, while waste segregation at source was just 18 per cent. Water supply was a mere 73 litres per capita per day (lpcd) against the target of 135 lpcd. The shortage of houses was 1.8 crore, and the Prime Minister wanted to provide houses for all by 2022.

Mr. Naidu asked the officials to propose “out of the box” ideas to face the challenges. There must be a single-window clearance, he said, adding that the private sector could be roped in to create public amenities. The proposed smart cities would take 10-15 years. For all this to happen, smart leadership was also required, he said. The municipal commissioners must play a key role. “Try to leave a mark on the city,” he told them.

The Minister urged municipal bodies to increase taxes every three years to meet the rising cost of better services

 


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