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Foundational learning has improved by over 20% in ‘balwadis' through ECCE strategy, claims PCMC

Foundational learning has improved by over 20% in ‘balwadis' through ECCE strategy, claims PCMC

Indian Express3 days ago
The Pimpri Chinchwad Municipal Corporation (PCMC) initiative to transform all 211 of its Balwadis (pre- primary schools) has led to more than 6,000 young children receiving stronger, safer, and much more engaging early education.
In just three years, the initiative, driven by a focused Early Childhood Care and Education (ECCE) strategy, has delivered measurable improvements in foundational learning, with assessments showing a 20–24% jump in skills.
'Early childhood is the most critical stage of development, and our goal has been to give every child a strong and joyful start,' said PCMC Commissioner Shekhar Singh. 'By investing in our Balwadis, training our teachers, involving parents, and adopting play-based learning, we are laying the foundation for a more inclusive and better-educated Pimpri Chinchwad.'
The programme began with a small working group of teachers, supervisors, and education professionals who redesigned the curriculum into activity-based modules. With regular monthly trainings, curated teaching materials, and strengthened teacher-student-parent relationships, the initiative scaled up rapidly. A cluster-based model with 16 master trainers and 9 supervisors now supports implementation across all Balwadis.
'With every cluster session, we're seeing greater alignment in curriculum delivery and pedagogy,' added Yamuna Khandagale, Assistant Coordinator, Pre-Primary Department. 'Teachers now plan their daily classes around each month's theme and ensure quality education reaches every child.'
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PCMC releases Environmental Status Report 2024-25, civic chief says valuable guide for road ahead
PCMC releases Environmental Status Report 2024-25, civic chief says valuable guide for road ahead

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PCMC releases Environmental Status Report 2024-25, civic chief says valuable guide for road ahead

The Pimpri Chinchwad Municipal Corporation (PCMC) on Tuesday unveiled its Environmental Status Report (ESR) for 2024-25, which officials said offered a comprehensive review of the city's environmental indicators and progress. The report was released by Municipal Commissioner Shekhar Singh during the Standing Committee meeting on Tuesday. 'The environmental progress Pimpri Chinchwad has made is not just the achievement of our systems, but a reflection of the collective participation of our citizens. This ESR is a mirror of our journey so far and a valuable guide for the road ahead,' the civic chief said after releasing the report. 'This report is more than just data—it's a roadmap for Pimpri Chinchwad's sustainable and resilient future. With community participation and administrative commitment, our city can become a national benchmark in green urban living,' said Vijaykumar Khorate, additional commissioner, PCMC. The report takes a comparative look at environmental trends over the last three years and presents detailed insights into the city's land use, population dynamics, rainfall data, water supply, sanitation, air and noise pollution, soil quality, solid waste management, energy usage, transport systems, and key public services. It also covers the impact of smart city initiatives and urban renewal projects, officials said. A key highlight of the report is that Pimpri Chinchwad has once again secured the 'Water+' certification for fulfilling all sewage treatment and reuse benchmarks. This marks the second consecutive year that the city has achieved this status. In addition, PCMC has successfully retained its 7-Star Garbage Free City rating under the Swachh Bharat Mission, thanks to its robust solid waste infrastructure that includes waste-to-energy plants, decentralised composting units, bio-medical and hotel waste processing systems, as well as construction and demolition (C&D) debris treatment facilities, the report said. In 2024-25, the city carried out extensive afforestation drives, planting a total of 1,73,576 native trees with the active involvement of civic bodies, NGOs, schools, and citizens. Air quality monitoring data showed that PM10 and PM2.5 levels exceeded permissible standards during certain months, with AQI readings in the 'good' category during monsoon, 'satisfactory' in summer, and 'moderate' during winter. Rising vehicular emissions remain a concern, with a 36% increase in registered vehicles over the past year. However, the share of e-vehicles has steadily increased to 3.5%, with over 50,902 electric vehicles now operating in the city, the report said. PCMC's commitment to sustainable public transport is evident in the growing PMPML fleet, which now includes 1,948 buses—of which 490 are electric and 225 run on CNG. On the sanitation front, all 19 sewage treatment plants in the city collectively process 332 MLD of wastewater, with 31 MLD reused each month for street washing, dust suppression, and landscaping, the report said. The city's waste-to-energy plant has processed over 3.5 lakh metric tonnes of household waste to generate more than 13.6 crore electricity units to date. The C&D waste plant has processed nearly 40,000 metric tonnes of debris, while the hotel wet waste project has produced 1.12 lakh kilograms of biogas from over 3,593 metric tonnes of organic waste. 'This year's ESR not only captures data but also documents the scientific and process-based efforts taken to protect and enhance our environment. Our goal has been continuous improvement, and we hope this report serves as a model for other cities,' said Sanjay Kulkarni, chief engineer, PCMC.

IIT-Bombay's report for PCMC detects polluted rivers, recommends no housing project nearby Taloja MIDC
IIT-Bombay's report for PCMC detects polluted rivers, recommends no housing project nearby Taloja MIDC

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Citizens take on PCMC tree authority on new felling, transplantation plans
Citizens take on PCMC tree authority on new felling, transplantation plans

Indian Express

time2 days ago

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Citizens take on PCMC tree authority on new felling, transplantation plans

A heated public hearing over the Pimpri Chinchwad Municipal Corporation's (PCMC) plan to fell thousands of trees along a nearly nine km stretch, from Wakad to Sangavi, for the Riverfront Development (RFD) project took place at the PCMC Garden Department in Bhosari on Monday. More than 100 citizens confronted Mahesh Gargote, garden superintendent of the PCMC and member-secretary, Tree Authority, and his team over the plan that they described as environmentally detrimental and full of legal violations. The public hearing comes after the PCMC issued a public notice on July 24, 2025, announcing the plan. In the days that followed, almost a thousand citizens mobilised to email their objections to the PCMC. They pointed out that 'This section of the Mula Riverbank is an ecological hot-spot, home to mature, native trees that form an integral part of the riparian ecosystem. These old-growth trees provide critical habitat for a variety of wildlife, including peacocks, hornbills, painted storks, turtles, and otters. The tree removal would result in irreversible habitat destruction and severely disrupt the river's delicate ecosystem'. On Monday, citizens raised their voices in person. Prajakta Mahajan of the Pune River Revival group was among the citizens who conducted spot checks on the trees. She showed the officials videos and images of the site, pointing out that 'PCMC said they would remove one tree and retain the one next to it, which is impossible as the roots of these old-growth trees are tangled'. 'Then, there are some trees that are half in water. You are saying that these three trees will be retained. How can you retain those trees if you are going to build embankments? How is it possible?' she asked the officials. She told The Indian Express, 'There are thousands of trees that will be impacted. We were given only a week and, if you consider this hearing, 10 days. It was impossible for us to check all the trees so we carried out a spot check in two areas.' In response to questions by some other citizens, Gargote said that trees would be transplanted in the defence area of Aundh and that 80 per cent transplantation efforts are successful – but citizens challenged these claims. Pushkar Kulkarni, a citizen, pointed out to the PCMC a Supreme Court judgment asking the state and Union Territories to form individual committees to identify any more deemed forests in their respective states and Union Territories. 'We don't know whether the government of Maharashtra has formed that committee yet and whether they have carried out the exercise as per the Supreme Court directives for Pune, Pimpri-Chinchwad or PMR region in the whole,' Kulkarni said at the hearing. He had already issued a notice to PCMC chief Shekhar Singh 'asking if a committee has been formed and a survey on the riparian zone carried out'. 'If it is a deemed forest, there is no question of PMC or PCMC carrying out any tree cutting, removal or plantation either. They are not supposed to do anything in the deemed forest,' said Kulkarni. On Monday, he served Gargote, who is a member-secretary, Tree Authority, PCMC, with the notice. 'Now my advocates will do the needful. They will issue further notices from their side and we will see whether PCMC responds or complies,' Kulkarni told The Indian Express. Ameet Singh, an environmental activist and researcher, told PCMC officials that they had not followed the laws and provisions in the legal framework. 'The property belongs to the water resources department and the irrigation department. Those clearances have not been taken. Yet, they are pushing ahead with this project and felling all these numerous trees which are actually a riparian forest, so, they are an ecosystem by themselves. These trees are being felled just because they want to encroach on the cross-section of the river with the agenda of building a road and recreational spaces that citizens have not asked for. This is taking away the flood resilience of the city. If you see the recent circumstances, where we have been suffering from so much urban flooding. The only recourse that we have to mitigate urban flooding is the river,' he said.. Singh added that the docket that the PCMC has issued about the tree felling and transplantation plans was made without scientific study or methods. 'We want that the docket to be scrapped,' said Singh. Gargote said that they had taken note of all objections. 'A lot of suggestions have also come by email. We have taken notes on all the suggestions that were made by the people. We will compile these and any other suggestions for reforms that might come in. We will place these before our higher authority,' he said. Dipanita Nath is interested in the climate crisis and sustainability. She has written extensively on social trends, heritage, theatre and startups. She has worked with major news organizations such as Hindustan Times, The Times of India and Mint. ... Read More

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