
376 govt schools in Dharwad need urgent repairs
According to a source from the education department, a total of 62 schools, including those in Dharwad Rural and Alanavar taluk, were in the repair list for Dharwad district. Out of these, 10 schools need urgent repairs. In Kundgol taluk, a total of 120 schools need repairs, of which 39 schools need urgent repairs as it is the rainy season. A total of 12 schools in Kalaghatagi, 6 schools in Navalgund, 4 schools in Dharwad city, 5 schools in Hubballi Rural, and 8 schools in Hubballi city need urgent repairs.
In Hubballi city, roofs and walls of two schools in Bidanal, and Tabibaland, One school each in Nagashettikoppa, Kamaripet, Pendaragalli, Sadashivanagar, have been damaged. In rural areas, five schools in Noolvi, Anchatageri, Suttagatti, Tarihal, and Kusugal have been damaged.
More than 84 schools, which are leaking and dilapidated, need urgent repairs. The schools that are in a dilapidated state and leak the most have already been listed.
by Taboola
by Taboola
Sponsored Links
Sponsored Links
Promoted Links
Promoted Links
You May Like
USDJPY đang đi lên không?
IC Markets
Đăng ký
Undo
Schools will reopen from June 1. Meanwhile, the district administration is planning to take up the 84 schools awaiting urgent repairs for development in the district in the first phase.
DDPI Shankmukh Swamy Keladimath said that in Dharwad district, 325 dilapidated classrooms were identified in 132 schools. Instructions have been given not to accommodate children in these schools. 494 are being repaired. Last year, 286 rooms were repaired.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Time of India
2 hours ago
- Time of India
One river, two countries: The Indus once fed civilisations. Now it can barely feed its delta
It gave India its name. But things are not exactly great with the great Indus river . What was once the 'Mother of Rivers', today finds its delta withering, mangroves dying and sacred fish like Palla and blind dolphin vanishing. Once Asia's second-largest, the Indus Delta has shrunk drastically due to upstream diversions. The annual freshwater flow to the delta has plummeted from 150–180 million acre-feet (MAF) to often less than 10 MAF. Mangrove coverage has reduced to barely a fifth of its historical extent, while seawater intrusion poisons croplands and groundwater up to 80 km inland. Productivity Tool Zero to Hero in Microsoft Excel: Complete Excel guide By Metla Sudha Sekhar View Program Finance Introduction to Technical Analysis & Candlestick Theory By Dinesh Nagpal View Program Finance Financial Literacy i e Lets Crack the Billionaire Code By CA Rahul Gupta View Program Digital Marketing Digital Marketing Masterclass by Neil Patel By Neil Patel View Program Finance Technical Analysis Demystified- A Complete Guide to Trading By Kunal Patel View Program Productivity Tool Excel Essentials to Expert: Your Complete Guide By Study at home View Program Artificial Intelligence AI For Business Professionals Batch 2 By Ansh Mehra View Program With India signalling unilateral disengagement from the Indus Waters Treaty (IWT) after the recent military conflict with Pakistan, tensions between the two neighbours have resurfaced around one of South Asia's most important yet ecologically compromised river systems. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Access all TV channels anywhere, anytime Techno Mag Learn More Undo While Pakistan has vowed to uphold the treaty, the recent strain underscores a larger reality: both countries have paid a profound ecological price for treating rivers as commodities rather than living ecosystems. The 1960 treaty, brokered by World Bank, divided the Indus basin between India and Pakistan, granting the eastern rivers (Ravi, Beas, Sutlej) to India and the western ones (Indus, Jhelum, Chenab) to Pakistan. Live Events Hailed as a model of water diplomacy, the IWT not only partitioned rivers but institutionalised a mindset of hydraulic engineering at the cost of environmental sustainability. As both countries now grapple with climate change and water stress, the flaws of that approach have become unignorable. Long before the treaty, the Indus — or Sindhu — shaped civilisations for over 4,500 years. Known as Sengge Chu in Tibet, Abaseen in Pashto, and Shendu in Chinese chronicles, it nourished the ancient cities of Mohenjo-daro and Harappa, supported empires from the Mauryas to the Mughals, and inspired Vedic hymns, Sufi poetry and pilgrimages. Alexander the Great compared it to the Nile. Persia's Darius I commissioned Scylax to navigate it in the 6th century BCE. Arab conquests under Muhammad bin Qasim relied on controlling the lower Indus. Mughal emperors recorded its richness, and British colonialists mapped its potential. The Rig Veda hymns praised: 'Sindhu in might surpasses all the streams that flow...' Near Rohri, the river nurtures spiritual islands like the shrine of Khwaja Khizr, guardian of waters, and Sadhu Bela temple, founded in 1823. Legends abound: of dolphins circling the island in sacred procession; of Palla fish blushing red when they reach Khwaja Khizr. Shah Abdul Latif Bhittai's Shah Jo Risalo uses the river as metaphor and mirror — for longing, spiritual quest, and separation. Despite this stature, modern nation-states subdued the Indus. Pakistan, with World Bank support post-IWT, built dams (Tarbela, Mangla), canals, and barrages (Guddu, Sukkur, Kotri). India pursued similar projects. Engineering success came with ecological collapse. Freshwater flow decline: from 150–180 MAF to under 10 MAF. Silt starvation: 90% trapped behind dams. Mangrove decline: from 600,000 ha to 100,000–130,000. Fishery collapse: Marine habitats damaged. Sea intrusion: Salinity 80 km inland, displacing communities. Farmers now rely on chemical fertilisers. Poor drainage and insufficient flushing cause waterlogging and salinisation. Signed on September 19, 1960, the IWT gave India control over eastern rivers and provided Pakistan funding for replacement infrastructure through Indus Basin Development Fund. The Bank facilitated $900 million in funding, sparking dam construction in both countries. Since then, the IWT has enabled continued lending: India received $130–140 billion and Pakistan $85–95 billion in Bank commitments by 2024. But the treaty viewed rivers as pipelines, not ecosystems. It lacked provision for environmental flows, delta rejuvenation, or groundwater sustainability. Plans are afoot to divert more Indus water to Cholistan — a desert in Punjab, Pakistan — for corporate farming via six canals. This mirrors past mistakes. Water diversion will deprive downstream Sindh and the delta. Irrigation in arid zones risks salinisation and water loss. Indigenous pastoral communities face displacement. The ancient Hakra (Sarasvati) River once flowed through Cholistan but vanished. If nature abandoned the desert, can engineered canals truly sustain it? With climate change, the treaty faces new challenges. Neither IWT nor its mechanisms anticipated melting glaciers, erratic monsoons or groundwater decline. Himalayan glacial melt now spikes flows unpredictably. Floods and droughts become more frequent. Both countries still follow outdated governance models. Groundwater is collapsing. Both are among the world's top extractors, and Indus Basin aquifers are depleting fast. The Ravi, once flowing through Lahore, is now a toxic drain; Yamuna and Ganga face similar crises. Poor coordination and dam operations worsen floods, as seen in 2010 and 2022 in Pakistan. Through vanishing deltas, displaced farmers, and dying fish, the Sindhu still roars — first heard in Vedic chants, echoed in Sindhi and Punjabi poetry, now resonating in climate-stressed communities. To revive it, both countries must go beyond technocratic division. A reimagined treaty must: Prioritise ecological flows and delta protection Establish joint climate-resilient basin governance Incorporate community-led water stewardship Recognise rivers as living systems, not state-owned assets Because a river doesn't just carry water. It carries memory, identity, and survival. If India and Pakistan are to find common ground, let it be the river that once sustained both. Let the Sindhu flow not just through channels of law and finance, but through shared ecological wisdom and cultural reverence. Only then can we unchain the Indus. (The author is a Karachi-based climate and sustainability expert and founder of Clifton Urban Forest . Views are personal)


Time of India
2 hours ago
- Time of India
Season no bar: This Vijayapura farmer grows Thailand mangoes all year long
Pic:Naveen Manganavar and his wife Danamma pose with a Thailand mango tree at their farm Vijayapura: Naveen Manganavar, alias Nooranda, 45, a farmer from Shivanagi village in Vijayapura taluk and district, has proven that mangoes are not just for summer, cultivating them year-round. Using water from the UKP irrigation project for his land in Kaggod village, he planted 3,000 saplings imported from Thailand on seven acres three years ago. Now, he is earning over Rs 10,000 a day from mango sales, and his farm has become a hotspot for farming enthusiasts in the region. Manganavar told TOI that he was a part-time employee with an insurance company and went to Thailand in 2011. "Since then, the idea was planted firmly in my mind. When I discussed it with my father and three brothers, they said it is risky to venture into it. However, my research and development work on the same continued along with my other routines. Since our land has some stones, we were growing onions and other crops, but it was not profitable. Finally, my family members allowed me to go forward with Thailand mangoes in 2021, and we ordered 5,000 saplings. In the course of three years, 2,000 saplings failed, and 3,000 started giving fruits from 2024," he added. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like She Mixed Pink Salt With This - Now She Can't Stop Losing Weight Break The Weight Learn More Undo He further added, "By the time we decided to plant mango saplings, our elected representative, MB Patil, was successful in bringing Krishna River water through lift irrigation projects. Thanks to the canal, our borewell was recharged with plenty of water. Now, we are getting a mango yield of 15-20 dozen per day, and our minimum revenue is Rs 10,000 per day. As many as 7-8 family members work on the farm, and this number increases on weekends. We have tied up with a private courier to send mango boxes as per the demand. As of now, we have a base of retail customers from Bengaluru, Kalaburagi, and Vijayapura," he stated. He is using Jeevamruta and vermicompost to make the fruits free from chemicals. "As they ripen on the tree itself, we need not adopt a ripening procedure using chemicals," he affirmed. Nitish Biradar, another farmer from Shivanagi, commented that seeing this experiment, many are planning to plant Thailand mangoes in the coming years. "When we took these fruits to minister MB Patil, he was happy to know that his irrigation project turned fruitful," he added. Mahantesh Biradar, a horticulture enthusiast, remarked that Thailand mangoes have a different but unique fragrance, and now Vijayapura people are enjoying them throughout the year. Stay updated with the latest local news from your city on Times of India (TOI). Check upcoming bank holidays , public holidays , and current gold rates and silver prices in your area. Get the latest lifestyle updates on Times of India, along with Raksha Bandhan wishes , messages and quotes !


Time of India
4 hours ago
- Time of India
Govt to start safe septic tank cleaning drive from Aug 15
Bhubaneswar: In a bid to ensure safety of sanitation workers, the housing and urban development department has decided to launch a comprehensive awareness drive on safe septic tank cleaning across the state starting Aug 15. Announcing this on its social media handle X (formerly Twitter), the urban development department stated that it will be a 15-day long IEC campaign, which will cover all 115 urban local bodies of the state. "A 15-day IEC campaign on safe septic tank cleaning will be launched across all ULBs from August 15. A preparatory meeting was held under the chairpersonship of Usha Padhee, principal secretary, H&UD department, with ULB officials through video conferencing," the announcement reads. The department has stated that the campaign will focus on community awareness, safe desludging, and promoting mechanised cleaning to ensure safety, dignity, and zero manual entry in septic tank operations. Notably, chief minister Mohan Charan Majhi recently announced a range of social welfare benefits for the core sanitation workers, primarily the septic tank cleaners, which include insurance benefits, housing provisions, and healthcare benefits, among others. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like The Secret Lives of the Romanovs — the Last Rulers of Imperial Russia! Learn More Undo The state govt in the past introduced comprehensive Odisha Urban Septage Management Guidelines-2016, which define the role of house owners as well as the urban local bodies in the construction of the septic tanks in houses. It also specified the safety measures to be followed for the septic tank cleaners and barred manual scavenging. However, due to lack of awareness and implementation issues, the state in the past witnessed several tragic incidents involving the sanitation workers. "We are aware of the situation and the risk core sanitation workers take during their day-to-day job. The awareness drive to be launched by the department will cover all these issues and raise awareness on safety," an urban development department official said. He said during the awareness drive, the civic body officials will also be sensitised on the safety of the sanitation workers. "The specified guidelines will be implemented for proper septage management in urban areas," the official added. Stay updated with the latest local news from your city on Times of India (TOI). Check upcoming bank holidays , public holidays , and current gold rates and silver prices in your area. Get the latest lifestyle updates on Times of India, along with Raksha Bandhan wishes , messages and quotes !