Greater Chennai Corporation

With the recently concluded elections, Chennai has  local body representatives for the first time in six years. While much has changed in the past few years, avenues for engagement of Chennaiites with the local government has remained limited. Could this scenario change with the election of the ward councillors? How can residents be involved in local governance and demand accountability from their local representatives? Citizen Matters hosted a webinar with a diverse panel on the ways in which Chennaiites can track the work of their ward councillors and the avenues available for their participation. The panel comprised M Radhakrishnan of…

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With the swearing-in of the councillors, Chennai has an elected local body for the first time since 2016. The councillors who have taken office are a mix of experienced old-timers and those who have been elected for the first time. Half of the council is represented by women.  While these are promising developments, Chennaiites must be able to engage with their elected representatives and officials from the civic body to ensure effective administration. The push for ward committees and area sabhas is one way there can be an element of participatory planning in local governance.  Read more: Chennai in 2022:…

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Kumaran S has been collecting waste from spots in Zone 9 of the Greater Chennai Corporation for over a decade now. But like most other informal waste pickers in Chennai, he has seen a sharp fall in his earnings from waste,  as a large portion of what they collected and sold are now handled by conservancy workers with the Greater Chennai Corporation or the private contractor in charge in most zones, Urbaser Sumeet. “I have been engaged in this work for over a decade. Things have never been as bad for us as it is now. During COVID-19 lockdown I…

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Mayor R Priya presented the budget for the Greater Chennai Corporation on April 9th. The budget has placed heavy emphasis on upgrades to and creation of new infrastructure, with focus on stormwater drains. The budget also looks to improve the state of schools run by the civic body and improve the quality of education and activities on offer through various new schemes.  The civic body’s expected revenue is Rs 2824 crore while the expected expenditure is Rs 3613 crore. Bulk of the revenue is to come from Rs 800 crore to be collected as property tax.  What is in store…

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Chennai Corporation zones to increase to 22 The 15 zones in the city demarcating Greater Chennai area will be increased to 22 zones in order to align with the assembly constituency boundaries. According to the Commissioner of the Greater Chennai Corporation, Gangadeep Singh Bedi, the aim of increasing the number of zones is to ensure that civic issues be addressed faster and in a uniform manner. In addition, the move aims to boost political representation in different areas. According to Bedi, since zones span over a large area, it has been challenging for city officials to address civic issues uniformly.…

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Chennai saw the inauguration of the first of its kind Gender and Policy Lab on April 1. The Lab will work with the civic body, transport agencies and other organs of the government to create a ‘safer and gender-inclusive city’.  The inauguration was attended by the Mayor of Chennai Corporation, R Priya, Commissioner of Chennai Corporation, Gagandeep Singh Bedi, Commissioner of Police, Shankar Jiwal, representatives from the World Bank, officials from various departments of the civic body and transport agencies and members of various non-profit and civil society organizations. The Gender and Policy Lab has been formed as part of…

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The lack of enough accessible public toilets has long been an issue in Chennai. Lessons from the pandemic and the emphasis on hygiene has made clean toilets all the more important for the city’s many residents. Recycle Bin, an NGO, has multiple ideas to make Chennai’s public toilets accessible and clean, in addition to a larger toilet masterplan at the policy level. Citizen Matters spoke to Ganga Dileep C, Founder-CEO and Principal Architect and Urban Designer at Recycle Bin on the various programmes in place and the possible roadmap for change for Chennai public toilets.  What does Recycle Bin do?…

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Translated by Sandhya Raju 2016-ம் ஆண்டு வரையப்பட்ட திடக்கழிவு மேலாண்மை விதிமுறைகளின் ஒரு அம்சமாக சென்னையை குப்பைத்தொட்டி இல்லா நகரமாக மாற்ற சென்னை மாநகராட்சி முற்பட்டது. இந்த திட்ட யோசனை அதிகாரிகள் மற்றும் சென்னைவாசிகளின் மனதில் கற்பனை வடிவம் பெற்றது. ஆனால், தொட்டிகளை அகற்றுவதில் ஏற்பட்ட நடைமுறை சிக்கலால், மாநகராட்சி இந்த திட்டத்தை அமலாக்க நேரம் எடுத்துக் கொண்டது. விழிப்புணர்வு நிகழ்ச்சிகள் மற்றும் சங்கச் செயல்பாடுகள் காரணமாக சில சுற்றுப்புறங்களில் குப்பைத் தொட்டியை குறைக்க முடிந்தது. குப்பைத் தொட்டி இல்லாதது சில சுற்றுப்புற பகுதிவாசிகளுக்கு சிரமத்தை ஏற்படுத்தியது. குப்பைத்தொட்டி இல்லா நகரமாக சென்னையை மாற்ற என்ன தேவை, கடந்த ஆண்டுகளில் இந்த திட்டத்திற்கு என்ன ஆனது. நகரத்தின் கழிவுப் பயணம் சீராக இல்லை சென்னையில் நாளொன்றுக்கு சுமார் 5400 MT (மாநகராட்சி தரவு படி)கழிவு உற்பத்தியாகிறது. இதில் கோடம்பாக்கம், தேனாம்பேட்டை, ராயபுரம், அண்ணாநகர் ஆகிய பகுதிகளிலிருந்து 50% மேல் கழிவு…

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Chennai saw unprecedented flooding the past year during the monsoon. Many streets were water-logged for days and residents marooned until the water receded. Analysis of the various reasons behind inundation in different parts of the city pointed to poor stormwater drain networking, poor construction of drains and loss of water bodies such as ponds and lakes to encroachment.  In addition to issues of flooding, loss of water bodies also leads to the loss of ecosystems that are supported by it. This is surely a cause for alarm in Chennai. The story of one such water body, a pond in Kolathur,…

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The idea of 'bin-less streets' has long captured the imagination of residents and authorities. The Greater Chennai Corporation had planned to make Chennai 'bin-less' as part of the Solid Waste Management Rules(SWM) framed in 2016. The GCC had decided to slow down this process, however, as a number of complications arose in removing the bins. Few neighbourhoods in the city have managed to go bin-less on account of rigorous awareness programmes and associational activity. Some attempts at going 'bin-less' have however inconvenienced residents in the area. While these cases could be chalked up to a matter of shoddy implementation, we…

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