Chennai Buzz : Metro footfalls dip, Parks maintenance to be privatised, new desalination plant and more!

Chennai Metro plans last mile connectivity even as usage falls after period of free rides, Corporation proposes privatising maintenance of parks, Pallikaranai marsh restoration continues, and a mega desalination plant is on the anvil, in this week's news round up

Metro Rail to ensure last mile connectivity

For any mass rapid system to succeed, it needs to ensure last mile connectivity, and  Chennai Metro Rail (CMRL) is very aware of this fact. In a few months from now, CMRL  will run share autos along its network, and will soon call for tenders.

“We plan to give a contract to the lowest bidding firm, to ply share autos to stations along our elevated and underground stretches. It will most likely be Tata Magic vans that would be operated through our network,” an official said

Meanwhile, Metro has seen a dip in patronage after withdrawal of the free rides that were offered as part of the Chennai Central extension inaugural. Metro Rail data shows daily passenger flow was above 1,20,000, when the rides were free, but fell to 55,640 on Wednesday. The number is nevertheless higher than the earlier average of 30,000, an official said.

Source:

The Hindu

Times of India

Corporation to bring all parks under private maintenance

Lack of adequate manpower to maintain the parks that come under  Greater Chennai corporation has prompted the civic body to award contracts for their maintenance, to private bodies. Of the 569 parks, GCC has been maintaining 252 parks using its own staff, while 40 parks were adopted by NGOs, individuals and organsiations. The rest are already under private contract maintenance.

“We have a sanctioned workforce of 366 in the parks department. Around 20 slots are vacant and 61 people have been re-deployed in other capacities. At least 22 workers are permanently stationed at the main plant nursery. This leaves us with only 263 people and then there is absenteeism to account for,” said a corporation official.

What remains unclear is whether GCC proposes to award the remaining parks’ maintenance also to contractors or is looking for corporate bodies to come forward to maintain parks.

Source

Times of India

Pallikaranai to be under eco restoration till 2023

Under the National Adaptation Fund for Climate Change, a sum of Rs.165.68 crore has been earmarked for the restoration of the Pallikaranai marsh till 2023.  The government also plans to continue its Massive Tree Planting programme by planting 70 lakh seedlings on 7,000 acres of degraded forests with an outlay of Rs 22.46 crore.

“Restoration activities like habitat improvement, protection, research, monitoring, publicity and awareness have been undertaken. The activities will continue from 2018-19 to 2022-23 at a cost of `165.68 crore under the national adaptation fund for climate change,” says the policy note for 2018-19 tabled in the Assembly.

Source

New Indian Express

Decks cleared for  the mega desalination plant near Chennai

Amidst warnings from biologists on the impact on ocean biodiversity, decks are cleared for the 400 million litres per day (MLD) mega desalination plant at Perur, Nemmeli, in Kancheepuram district, along East Coast Road. Metro water has been asked to give an undertaking to TNCZMA that it would bear the full cost of environmental damage and restitution arising due to setting up of the proposed plant.

Source

New Indian Express

Chennai Metro turns to technology to save water

Considering the water situation in Chennai, Chennai Metro is banking on technology to keep its underground stretch running during the dry season. Chennai Metro, which requires 20,000 litres of water a day to ensure air conditioners in the underground stretch remain operational, is now looking at gas-based cooling technology to keep the stations cool.

Currently, Chennai Metro is tapping water from Metro Water as well as buying it through  tankers. Apart from these sources, Chennai Metro is also looking at treated sewage water to ensure underground metro stations function, said L Prasad, Director (Systems and Operations).

Source

New Indian Express

 

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Similar Story

GCC’s new vendor fee mandate and the struggle for dignity on Chennai’s streets

Street vendors in Chennai are seeking freedom from eviction drives and hope that ID cards will prevent harassment by officials.

Street vending represents a unique form of business in which the vendor's day begins and ends on the street. Vendors typically toil from dawn until late at night, often for 12 to 14 hours a day, yet many continue to remain economically vulnerable. Poor economic conditions prevailing between 1980 and 2010 forced a large number of individuals to drop out of school, compelling them to take up street vending of various goods as a means of survival. Today, India is home to nearly 10 million street vendors, accounting for about 15 per cent of urban informal employment. Recognising their contribution…

Similar Story

Voting wisely: Mumbai citizens release manifesto for the BMC elections

Ahead of BMC polls, youth-led Blue Ribbon Movement unites Mumbaikars to draft a citizen manifesto for inclusive, sustainable governance.

As Mumbai votes to elect its city corporators on January 15, many citizens’ groups and civil society organisations have voiced their demands for better civic infrastructure. They have also highlighted the frustrations of daily problems faced by residents due to the absence of a municipal council. Last weekend, over 50 people from across Mumbai gathered with one shared purpose: to reimagine what a truly inclusive, responsive city could look like. Mumbaikars aged 18 to 60 deliberated on what was urgently needed for their city — better infrastructure, improved accessibility and good governance. The event, called the WISE Voting Weekend, was…