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DDA to keep tab on frequent visitors to Vikas Sadan

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The Hindu       22.12.2014 

DDA to keep tab on frequent visitors to Vikas Sadan

Frequent visitors to the office of the Delhi Development Authority (DDA) will now be watched and a tab kept on them as a measure to bring in transparency.

The steps are in keeping with a recommendation of the Standing Committee on Urban Development. The committee while examining the functioning of the DDA in its report tabled in the Lok Sabha noted that despite taking various steps to bring in transparency in its functioning, the DDA has failed to eliminate the existence of touts/ agents in its office.

“As recommended by the committee, frequent inspections will continue to be carried out by DDA at the reception office to check the frequency of visiting persons,” the DDA said in its reply.

While taking a serious view on the issue, the committee said it “strongly desires that the DDA should strictly ensure compliance of the steps initiated by it. The committee further desires that CCTV cameras should be installed in all the rooms of the DDA at the earliest and the records of the register at the reception office of the DDA should be periodically monitored in order to see the name of frequently visited persons so that his/her entry can be out under watch.”

The committee observed that to reduce the movement of touts in various branches, the exit/entry points in Vikas Sadan, the office of the DDA have been reduced from seven to three and file tracking system has been implemented in the vigilance branch to check delays in handling of files and presence of outsiders.

It also noted that installation of CCTV cameras is under process in Vikas Sadan where major public dealing activities are conducted and directions have been issued to put on website all rules to increase transparency.

However, the committee expressed concern that “despite all these systems in place, the DDA has not been able to eliminate the existence of touts/ agents in its office”.

The DDA in its reply said CCTV cameras have already been installed all over Vikas Sadan, including entry and exit points and in all the rooms/ branches dealing with public, and are being monitored. “The control screen of these CCTV cameras has also been provided to various heads of departments who could monitor simultaneously any unwanted happenings which can be avoided,” the DDA informed.

As regards the records of reception office, the DDA said the same has been computerised and photo cards are being issued to visitors to keep a check on touts/ agents.

These measures have been taken as the Standing Committee on Urban Development had stated that the DDA had failed to eliminate the existence of touts

 

Mandya CMC to soon take up several development projects

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The Hindu      22.12.2014  

Mandya CMC to soon take up several development projects

It plans to spend 4.82 crore on these schemes

The number of vehicles plying on the Bengaluru-Mysuru highway that passes through Mandya has increased enormously, necessitating improvementof certain facilities.
The number of vehicles plying on the Bengaluru-Mysuru highway that passes through Mandya has increased enormously, necessitating improvementof certain facilities.

The Directorate of Urban Land Transport (DELT) and the Mandya City Municipal Council (CMC) have proposed to take up developmental projects in the congested areas of the city.

To this end, the CMC has prepared a detailed project report (DPR) pertaining to various developmental schemes and submitted it to the DELT, which would be funding 60 per cent of the cost.

The CMC will bear the remaining cost of the project. In association of the directorate, the civic authority will construct a pedestrian over-bridge near the Saint John’s Church on Bengaluru-Mysuru highway; a hawkers’ zone near the Mandya Urban Development Authority layout on the Mandya-Nagamangala highway and several bus-bays, R. Prathap, Executive Engineer of the CMC, told The Hindu. The proposed over-bridge will be the first one to be constructed here. The council was aiming at improving coordination in planning and implementation of urban transport projects, N.M. Shashikumar, Commissioner of Mandya CMC, told this correspondent.

Urbanisation could become successful only with effective urban transport system. Therefore, with the help of the directorate, the CMC would improve the circles and pavements across the city, he said.

A sum of Rs. 4.82 crore would be spent on these projects.

A high-level team from DELT would visit Mandya in the first week of January to examine the feasibility of the projects, Mr. Prathap said.


Schemes include construction of an over-bridge and a few bus-bays

Detailed project report prepared by CMC has been submitted to DELT

 

Demand for drinking water in Mysuru outstrips availability

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The Hindu         20.11.2014 

Demand for drinking water in Mysuru outstrips availability

Rs. 320-crore project at Hale Unduwadi village on the anvil

With the demand for drinking water in Mysuru outstripping availability, civic authorities are planning to give a fresh push to the proposed water supply project at KRS backwaters, which is expected to bring an additional 300 million litres per day (MLD) of water.

A proposal to implement the Rs. 320-crore project at Hale Unduwadi village, about two km from KRS dam, has been prepared and forwarded by the Karnataka Urban Water Supply and Sewerage Board (KUWSSB) to the Karnataka Urban Infrastructure Development and Finance Corporation (KUIDFC), the nodal agency for the Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission (JNNURM).

A meeting of officials from Vani Vilas Water Works (VVWW) convened by Mayor R. Lingappa recently decided to urge the State government to forward the project to the Centre for approval under JNNURM. “The project should be implemented either by the Centre under JNNURM or by the State government,” he said.

VVWW Executive Engineer Jayaram said the drinking water presently available is barely able to meet the demands of residents in the limits of Mysore City Corporation. “We are unable to provide water to residents of the new areas added by MUDA,” he said.

He said the proposed project, supplemented by existing drinking water projects, can take care of all areas coming under Mysore-Nanjangudu Local Area Development Plan. The site for the proposed project at KRS backwaters has water 365 days of the year and does not go dry even when the reservoir does, VVWW officials said, adding that the pipeline from Hale Unduwadi to the city can also provide water to about 92 villages enroute.

Referring to the new layouts, which had either already come up or were in different stages of development, Mr. Jayaram said the demand for drinking water is expected to shoot up sharply in the coming days. “We are able to provide water to connections only within the Outer Ring Road (ORR). We are not able to meet the demand for water from people residing in layouts outside the ORR,” a VVWW official conceded. The project envisages construction of a jackwell at Hale Undawadi, 2 km upstream of the KRS reservoir; and a water treatment plant at Beechanakuppe, about 4 km away. The project also requires acquisition of about 167 acres of land, officials added.

 


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