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Grade separator work yet to begin

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The Hindu     01.11.2010

Grade separator work yet to begin

Aloysius Xavier Lopez
Design of the two facilities proposed on Anna Salai yet to be finalised
— Photo: R. Shivaji Rao

Waiting for respite: One of the grade separators is to decongest traffic near the new Assembly complex. A scene near the Anna Salai-Wallajah Road junction.

CHENNAI: The construction of two grade separators on Anna Salai, which have been proposed to decongest traffic on the arterial road, has been delayed.

The design of the facilities is yet to be finalised, though the piling work was expected to begin by the end of August. The Highways Department had said that it was planning to complete the piling work before March 2011 to avoid any conflict with the tunnelling work for the Metro Rail project. As a result, officials of the Highways Department said the commencement of work for construction of Metro Rail network next year in the Anna Salai stretch is likely to be delayed by a few months.

Initially, the Highways Department would have to do the piling work by drawing Rs.100 crore from the Infrastructure and Amenities Fund of the Chennai Metropolitan Development Authority, which was sanctioned sometime ago. But, the Government Order sanctioning the two projects is yet to be issued.

In June, the CMDA had decided to allocate Rs.385 crore, collected under the infrastructure and amenities charges, for the construction of the grade separators. The amount collected under the Infrastructure and Amenities charges has crossed Rs.450 crore in the Chennai Metropolitan Area. One of the grade separators spanning a length of 1.9 km from near the P.Orr & Sons showroom, opposite the new Assembly complex, to Popat Jamal, opposite Spencer Plaza, is estimated to cost Rs.161 crore.

The other grade separator, to be constructed at an estimated cost of Rs.339 crore, would be 2.9 km long from Vaanavil showroom in Teynampet to the junction of CIT Nagar First Main Road near Saidapet.

 

High Court Bench directs transport corporations to pay costs of Rs.30,000

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The Hindu  28.10.2010

High Court Bench directs transport corporations to pay costs of Rs.30,000

Mohamed Imranullah S.

For not providing an alternative employment to disabled employees

“Such employment should not be given as a fresh entrant or in a lower scale of pay”

“The transport corporation is yet to come up with any useful proposal”


MADURAI: The Madras High Court Bench here on Tuesday directed Tamil Nadu State Transport Corporation (TNSTC) as well as State Express Transport Corporation (SETC) to pay costs to the tune of Rs.30,000 for discharging from service six of its employees who acquired medical disabilities.

Allowing all six writ petitions filed by the victims seeking reinstatement, Justice K. Chandru said:

“This court is constrained to order cost because the transport corporations are not only insensitive to the cases on hand but in spite of the clear mandate by a Parliamentary law, they had driven their employees to move this court when there is no warrant for driving them to do so.”

The judge pointed out that Section 47 of the Persons with Disabilities (Equal Opportunities, Protection of Rights and Full Participation) Act, 1995 states that no establishment should dispense with or reduce in rank, an employee who acquired a disability during his service.

Dealing with the issue on several occasions, various Division Benches of the High Court had held that such persons should be given alternative employment along with protection of their salary and status.

Such employment should not be given as a fresh entrant or in a lower scale of pay.

“When a worker by ignorance of his right agrees to go on medical invalidation, his ignorance cannot be taken advantage of by the Corporation… A worker even if he agrees by a settlement, such settlement is invalid in the light of the non obstante clause found under 1995 Act,” the judge said.

Mr. Justice Chandru also pulled up the transport corporations for not creating an internal authority comprising senior officials, as directed by him in another writ petition on September 27, to alleviate the grievances of their employees who face occupational hazards of facing numerous accidents.

“The transport corporation is yet to come up with any useful proposal. The standing counsel for the Corporation informed that a Board meeting will have to be convened which may be held only in December, 2010. This is hardly expected of a public sector company which must have a corporate responsibility at least for its own workers,” the judge said.

He went on to state: “It is also rather unfortunate that in all these writ petitions, though respondents have been served (with notices), they have not come forward to file counter affidavits except in three cases.

Last Updated on Thursday, 28 October 2010 10:01
 

Need for evolving a hassle-free system for pedestrians

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The Hindu  28.10.2010

Need for evolving a hassle-free system for pedestrians

Ajai Sreevatsan


NEED FOR MORE:A growing city needs a host of facilities to ensure safety of pedestrians. A foot overbridge under construction on the Taluk Office Road in Saidapet. —

CHENNAI: The State government recently gave clearance for pedestrian foot overbridges with escalators on seven busy roads across the city. While the project will provide some immediate relief to pedestrians using those roads, the larger issue of greater inclusiveness in urban transport planning remains unaddressed.

Nearly 42 per cent of all road accidents that occur in the city involve pedestrians. According to the Comprehensive Traffic and Transportation Study for the Chennai Metropolitan Area (CMA), footpaths are present in only 20 per cent of the roads.

The CTTS says that though walking and cycling account for 34 per cent of all daily trips being undertaken in the city, the facilities for such road users are completely inadequate.

In fact, the modal share of walking has steadily increased over the past three decades because cycling has become near impossible on the city's roads and many cannot afford any other mode of transport.

While the CMA accounts for nearly 1,200-odd km of road network, only about 20 km of roads have 1.5 m wide footpaths. Of the 217 major traffic junctions in the city, only 36 have signals to regulate pedestrian crossing.

“There is absolutely no policy attention to pedestrian facilities in most Indian cities,” says Anumita Roychowdhury, researcher at the Centre for Science and Environment (CSE). “Across Indian cities, between 40 to 45 per cent trips, are below five km. A focus on building car-centric infrastructure is destroying our walkable cities. Also, public transport patronage cannot be increased without providing walking spaces that will act as holding areas to accommodate pedestrians.”

Pedestrian flows in the city in certain locations such as Broadway and at the junction near T.Nagar bus stand is more than 10,000 persons per hour. That is comparable to the peak hour vehicular flow through junctions such as Madhya Kailash.

“Everybody must have equal access to public spaces,” says Shreya Gadepalli, director, Institute of Transportation Policy (Ahmedabad).

“Most Indian cities are going through a phase of addiction to the car, which requires the increase of average vehicle speeds at the expense of safety to other road users. It is similar to what western cities went through in the 1960s and 1970s. Planners must realise that equitability must be a grounding principle for building our cities. We must build our cities for people, not cars,” she adds.

New York recently converted Times Square into a pedestrian plaza. San Francisco has enforced a ‘Better Street Policy' to reduce traffic volumes on the road and to facilitate pedestrian movement. Making cities pedestrian-friendly also has important social dimensions, says Geetam Tiwari, chairperson of the Transportation Research and Injury Prevention Programme at IIT-Delhi. “The percentage of people who walk to work for more than 30 minutes, often in dangerous circumstances, because they cannot afford any form of private transport, has increased,” she adds.

According to her, upcoming public transport projects must think about building integrated pedestrian support systems. Stressing that there is greater appreciation of pedestrian needs, K.Rajaraman, Managing Director, Chennai Metro Rail Ltd., said the rail network, expected to cater to 13 million people, will lay special emphasis on pedestrian access to the stations.

Since most of the stations will be along busy roads, he said dispersing commuters once they get out of the Metro will be a major challenge. “Almost all stations will have traffic integration areas with facilities for bicycle access. Most approach roads will also have properly designed 2 m-wide footpaths,” he added.

Last Updated on Thursday, 28 October 2010 09:55
 


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