Saturday 18 August 2007

Nullah News - National & International 01

Nullah News - National 01 - Lucknow
‘Work on desilting of nullahs expected to finish on June 30’

Nullah Deadline(D)

- Lucknow, June 28: “Work has already been started and is expected to finish by June 30. The contractors have been asked to give a compliance report on the same date,” he said. He added that officials have been asked to expedite work considering the arrival of the monsoon. “Water logging can be avoided in the city if the nullahs are cleaned properly before monsoon,” Singh said.

- The city has around 569 nullahs. Nullahs less than one metre-deep are desilted by the Heath Department of the LMC, while those deeper than one metre are desilted by the Engineering Department and the Rubbish Removal Department. Acting Nagar Swasthya Adhikari A K Pandey said that all 328 nullahs that are supposed to be desilted by the Health Department have been desilted once and another round of work has been started.

- Municipal Commissioner Shailesh Kumar Singh said contractors will not be paid for areas that are either waterlogged or not desilted before June 30.

- Meanwhile, the anti-encroachment team of the LMC removed around 150 temporary or permanent structures in different zones. Harveer Singh said some structures were as old as 20 years and were constructed on the nullahs.
News Source - The Indian Express - Friday , June 29, 2007



Nullah News - International 01 - Islamabad
Nullah Cleansing or Civic Sense Infliction

Responsible Behaviour

-A special campaign for cleaning nullahs has begun in Islamabad on the directives of CDA Chairman Kamran Lashari. During the campaign, garbage in nullahs would be taken out to ensure a clean water flow. The CDA has directed citizens not to throw waste in nullahs and sewerage lines and to cooperate with the authorities in the campaign.

-OK Good enough - though I think Islamabad's sewerage lines are much "cleaner" than our twin city's or Lahore or any other city's nullahs. The thing of UTMOST importance is to teach our people at least some civic sense - when proper bins and carts come for taking the daily garbage then why the heck the need arises to litter in nullahs ???


-I've seen people going in 75+ Lacs of car and still throwing garbage, wrappers, cans out on the road - can't they keep some bags with them to collect their litter and throw it when they reach home??

-Don't we own some responsible behaviour here???
News Source - Metro Blogging, Islamabad, Pakistan, February 27, 2007



Nullah News - International 01 - Islamabad
Water and Waste

Murky Depths

- Has anybody else noticed how ill maintained and seriously deteriorated the city's water and sanitation system is? It is something that comes to for every time the rains come. Islamabad has the slight advantage over most cities in that it is a planned one which means that most if it does not face the conventional problems of water standing and stagnating on roadways. However, move away from the older sectors in to ones located to the edge of the city, including F-11, I-8, I-10 etc and you will find pools burgeoning every few kilometers.

- Besides that, lots of basements and relatively low lying houses, and those located in natural depressions complain often of floods of waste and muck. Lots of people end up calling for CDA pumps to clean out the areas that for days reek of stench and sewerage.

- It is a well known truth that all the waste from Islamabad's sectors, including industrial waste culminates in the various "nullahs" flowing between and under the streets before culminating in the Nullah Leh. These health hazards are becoming more acute with each passing day as in addition to the underground waste, these nullahs are also a dumping ground for a lot of the city's garbage. In spite of dumpsters in every other street, it is very convenient simply to toss bags and bins from car windows into the murky depths of these rivers of filth.

- As these nullahs flow deeper through Islamabad and Rawalpindi into relatively closer knit and lower level communities, areas and townships, what is not very conceivable for us is that these nullahs become the source of water for some areas as well. The drinking part, but old-style "dhobi-ghaats" and using this water to wash dishes and clothes personally is quite common.

- What is seriously worrying is that nobody really knows the state of the pipes and tubes and things under the city that make up its sewerage system. Decay and a poor checks and maintenance methods mean that water contamination is a very real problem. Similarly drains bubbling up due to blockages in streets and out on roads are also very common.

- An ineffective and poorly retained drainage system is a health risk, giving birth to possible ailments relating to skin and breathing at the simplest and if not contained and corrected, could bloom into serious ailments especially if the lines carrying waste merge with water lines. It has happened before and needs to be addressed by the Capital Development Authority at the earliest!
News Source - Metro Blogging, Islamabad, Pakistan, July 23, 2006

Nullah News 07

Juhu: In a unique civic initiative, residents of the Juhu Vile Parle Development (JVPD) Scheme have photographed encroachments along the Irla nullah to gather evidence on the clogging of drains, one of the key reasons for heavy flooding during the recent deluge.

Nullah News 07 - Locals expose clogging of Juhu Nullah

Clean-Up Act
-The entire area of JVPD, one of the best maintained in the western suburbs, was under five feet of water post-26/7. Several ground-floor houses were damaged by floodwater and hundreds of cars parked along the roads are still lying in garages awaiting repairs.

- Harit Desai, member of the JVPD Association, along with a few colleagues followed the route of the nullah and clicked around 30 photographs showing rampant encroachments. “We were shocked to see that shops have been illegally constructed over the nullah on Irla lane, and the municipal corporation is doing nothing about it,’’ he said. The evidence has already been presented to 14 housing societies that are part of the JVPD association.

- Following this, the members now plan to meet senior officials of the municipal corporation to present the evidence and demand action against the encroachments.

- On their part, the societies have already started the work of cleaning up several areas of the Irla nullah, which is the main outlet for the sewage lines in Juhu. The sewage lines empty into the nullah near Cooper Hospital, the municipal market and Amitabh Bachchan’s bungalow. It is these points that are choked with dirt, Desai said. “The situation is so bad that the nullah water starts flowing back into the drains during high tide,’’ he said. Since the BMC has failed to clean the nullahs, the societies have spent Rs 4 lakh on this work.

- Local MLA Ashok Jadhav, too, admitted that the nullahs are not cleaned and said this was the main reason for flooding. “In lots of cases, there is illegal reclamation of land around the nullahs, and the municipal corporation has not taken any action,’’ he said. In the wake of 26/7, local residents said the neighbourhood has also united to make its own arrangements for removal of garbage. “We hired six trucks and removed nearly 250 truckloads of garbage after the deluge. We also sprayed pesticides on garbage dumps,’’ he said.
News Source - TOI - 23.09.05

Nullah News 06

BMC has no place to rehabilitate families living near nullahs that need to be widened for the project

Nullah News o6 - Slums around nullahs will delay Brimstowad

Down the Drain

The delay will cost the citizens dearly as they would have to wait for six years to see a flood-free Mumbai FILE PIC

- It’s not just a couple of years, you would have to wait for at least six years to stop seeing your home getting flooded every monsoon. Reason?

- The BMC doesn’t have tenements to house 25,000 families who live in slums near the nullahs, which have to be widened as per the Brihanmumbai Storm Water Drain (Brimstowad) project.

- “It could take a minimum of six years to complete the project, simply because there are no houses available for these people. There has been no effort to construct houses or to find accommodation for these people.

- This is unfortunately going to cost citizens dearly as the nullahs cannot be widened without rehabilitating these people,” said a storm water department official.

- The civic body claims that the Brimstowad project would solve much of the city’s flooding problem as drainage capacity of the drains would be increased from the current 40 mm per hour to 50 mm per hour.

Phatak allays fears
- Municipal Commissioner Jayraj Phatak, however, claimed that they had enough tenements. “We have enough tenements and would acquire more tenements from other agencies as well as from our own rehab projects,” he said.

- But if a storm water department official is to be believed, the BMC has managed to provide tenements to only around 450 families so far.

- “The BMC is hoping that MMRDA would provide some tenements but the latter is itself struggling to house dwellers that have encroached on the airport land,” said the official.

- The tenements for 450 families have been purchased from either the Shiv Shahi Punarvasan Prakalp or from the MMRDA.

- The BMC pays an approximate Rs 4 lakh to these agencies for acquiring these tenements.

- There are around 20 nullahs in the city, all of which have been encroached and occupied by hutment dwellers.
News Source - Mid-Day

Nullah Related News 01

661 slums on nullahs in the area were demolished, bringing a ray of hope to the Guzdar Scheme’s Residents’ Trust (GSRT).

Nullah News 06 - 661 slums razed in Santacruz

4 Nullahs Vs 1,000 Huts

- After 21 court orders, the government finally got down to clearing slums from the Guzdar Bandh area on Sakaram B Patil Marg in Santacruz(W).

- The trust has been complaining about the slums for five years. And it took 21 court orders since April 2001 for the government to finally take notice.

- “We have demolished 661 slums. We are following court orders; the last hearing was on January 12 and we were told to demolish the slums immediately,” said B B Gawli, deputy collector (encroachment), Bandra. The mushrooming of slums on nullahs had become a cause for concern for locals, as sewage water had started entering their homes.

- Trupti Patel, trustee, GSRT, said, “The proliferation of slums was affecting the residential areas. The slums were blocking the flow of water into the sea. The four nullahs were choked with garbage. The nullahs were blocked by 1,000 huts on their either sides. Moreover, sluice gates to open/close the nullahs were also destroyed. As a result, our buildings were getting flooded even during high tide, let alone during monsoon.

- Sometimes even sewage water entered our homes. On July 26 last year, during floods, our area was the worst affected.”

- Patel said the trust was not against the slum-dwellers, but they had no other option as the slums were affecting residential areas. GSRT chairman Gautam Rao said, “It is a moment of triumph for us as it is the first major step in resolving this battle we’ve been fighting for years.”

- Now, only the issue of sluice gates, which were destroyed in June 2000, remained, Patel said. “But they will be re-installed before the monsoon,” he said.

- Since 2001, the government has demolished over 1,300 slums in the area.

- Asked if the government planned to rehabilitate the displaced slum-dwellers, Gawli said, “We have rehabilitated around 315 slum-dwellers, who had settled before 1995, at Anik Nagar in Chembur.”
News Source - DNA

Nullah News 05

Move over Marine Drive. Once the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) completes its three-year long project, 1,065 small and big nullahs would have been cleaned, their banks converted to promenades and residents will have their recreational space.

Nullah News 05 - Nullahs to be the next place to hang out or jog alongside it, says the BMC who is spending crores of rupess to turn nullah banks into recreational spaces.

A date at the Nullah

- The first in line to get a make-over are the Irla and Mogra nullahs in Andheri west, which shall be ready within one year.

- As of now, these banks have been encroached upon by unauthorised slum dwellers, who will be rehabilitated to transit camps across the city.

- BMC has appointed Montgomery Watson Harza as consultants, and they will be paid Rs 15.65 for drawing up the beautification plans for all the 1065 canals — of which 271 are in the island city, 509 in the eastern suburbs and 285 in the western suburbs.

http://www.mwhglobal.com/default.asp

- The total budget for this project is Rs 1,395 crore — out of which Rs 282 crore is for the island city, Rs 270 crore for the eastern suburbs and Rs 843 for the western suburbs. The basis of the beautification project will be the recommendations made by the Dr Chitale committee.

- Once completed, the attractions will include jogging tracks, parking spaces and flowing nullahs that will be clean all year round. Six metres on either side of the canals will be earmarked for vehicular traffic. The BMC hopes this will make citizens stay and spend longer periods in these spaces.

- To maintain the serene surroundings, no new construction will be permitted beside the nullahs. Any permission that has already been given will be re-examined by the Building Proposal department.

- The project details:
Total no of nullahs to becleaned: 1,065
First in line: Irla and Mogra, Andheri west
Ready in: 1 year
Total budget for project Rs 1,395 crore
News Source - TOI