
Funds sanctioned to resolve sewage overflow in Civil Lines
Kanpur: The
Kanpur Municipal Corporation
(KMC) on Thursday sanctioned a sum of
Rs 92.24 lakh
to
UP Jal Nigam
(Rural) to resolve the issue persistent sewage water logging near Amba Nursing Home in Civil Lines area.
The problem reportedly originated nearly four years ago when I&D project of nullahs under the
Namami Gange Mission
was implemented. Since then, sewer chambers have consistently overflowed in the area resulting in frequent water logging in Civil Lines as well as on VIP Road.
Mayor Pramila Pandey told reporters that a team of Jalkal engineers visited the site to examine the situation. It was observed that a 1,600 mm diameter rising line had been divided into two lines of 800 mm diameter each, and later recombined into a 1,600 mm diameter rising line leading to reduced flow in the system.
The UP Jal Nigam (Rural) work agency stated that the original 1,600 mm diameter line was laid under JNNURM and that the Muir Mill nullah was not crossed near Amba Nursing Home. In 2019, during Ardh Kumbh, the line was connected to two pipelines of 800 mm and one of 450 mm diameter. These three pipelines are insufficient to handle the pressure of the sewer flow during peak hours, resulting in overflow in the Civil Lines area.
The engineers concluded that the only viable solution was to lay a 1,600 mm diameter RCC pipeline, estimated to cost around Rs 92.24 lakh. Based on this assessment and after discussions with officials, it was decided to allocate the sanctioned amount to the UP Jal Nigam (Rural).
As the chairman of the Committee of the 15th Commission, Mayor Pramila Pandey sanctioned the funds and instructed UP Jal Nigam (Rural) to commence the work without delay.
Hashtags

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


Time of India
17 minutes ago
- Time of India
Tribals protest demanding school, road, ration depot in Ananthagiri
Visakhapatnam: In a desperate bid to access quality education and basic amenities, tribal residents of Kadarevu, Solabongu, and Kalyanagummi in Ananthagiri mandal staged a protest demanding the establishment of a school in their village. Currently, children from these hamlets are forced to walk nearly six kilometers to reach the nearest school, which is often unsafe and difficult. The students from these remote hamlets are studying at Tamarabba MPP School in Devarapalli mandal of Anakapalli district, and their daily commute is a harrowing experience. During heavy rainfall, the students are forced to stay home as there is no safe way for them to attend the school. When the water level in the Raiwada recedes, they travel to school by boat. However, when the water level is high, they are forced to walk around the hill for four kilometers. The villagers, led by elders Nandula Rajarao and R Rajarao, demanded that a special school be established in their village to alleviate the suffering of their children. CPM leader K Govinda Rao added that 21 more tribal children from villages such as Kadarevu and Goppala Palem walk 12 kilometers daily, crossing large hills, to reach Bodugaruvu for schooling. "In July 2024, villagers held a protest demanding a school, following which the Ananthagiri mandal education officer visited and promised to establish an alternative school. A proposal was submitted to the district collector and the district education officer of ASR district to set up a NRST (non-residential special training) school, but the government has not approved it," he said. The villagers also highlighted the inordinate delay in the construction of road from Nerellapudi to Kalyanagumma village. Despite a grant of Rs 1 crore being sanctioned, forest permissions were not granted, and necessary clearances have not been given even after a year. As a result, the villagers of Kalyanagumma are forced to travel through Anakapalli, Vizianagaram, and Alluri Sitarama Raju districts to reach Gumma Panchayat via Damaku and Cherikibidda to collect their ration rice. The tribals demanded the immediate establishment of a separate ration depot for these villages and the granting of special forest permissions for Kalyanagumma village. The government's inaction has left the villagers feeling frustrated and helpless.


Time of India
32 minutes ago
- Time of India
Digital resurvey set to miss deadline
T'puram: Three years into Kerala's most ambitious land governance reform to date, the state's digital resurvey project aimed at digitally mapping all land parcels across 1,550 villages remains only partially realised, with completion hovering around one-third of the total target. According to documents prepared by the survey and land records department, accessed by TOI, a total of 639 villages were taken up under the first three phases but survey activities were completed in only a fraction of them. In terms of area, the resurvey covered just over 4.09 lakh hectares of the estimated 10.3 lakh hectares planned across all phases. This flagship initiative, launched under the Rebuild Kerala Initiative with a projected outlay of Rs 858cr, is being implemented using advanced technologies, including drones, RTK rovers, robotic total stations and GIS-enabled platforms all aimed at resolving long-standing issues of boundary conflicts and outdated land records. Yet the journey to this point was anything but straightforward. The first resurvey attempt in the state in 1966 was left incomplete and the second attempt in 1996 too was abandoned current initiative was framed by learning from the past failures, with institutional reforms and inter-departmental mechanisms built in to avoid previous pitfalls. The project was formally rolled out in three stages. The first phase of 200 villages began on Nov 1, 2022, followed by a second phase, also comprising 200 villages, which was launched in Oct 2023. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Forget Furosemide, Use This Household Item To Help Drain Edema Fluid WellnessGuide Learn more Undo A third phase involving an additional 200 villages was initiated subsequently. Of the 639 villages across these three phases, only 99 villages from the second phase and six from the third reached the milestone of publishing Section 9(2) notifications under the Survey Boundaries Act, indicating completion of the critical verification and public display stages. District-level performance reveals a highly uneven landscape. Thrissur leads the state with surveys completed in 60 of 130 villages, while Kannur completed 40 of its 95 villages. In other districts like Ernakulam, Kollam, and Kottayam, about one-third of villages were covered. However, progress in Wayanad and Idukki remains low, at just 20% and 21% respectively. Thiruvananthapuram completed surveys in only 35 of the 120 villages. Malappuram, Kozhikode, Palakkad, and Kasaragod also fall below the state average in terms of completion rate, pointing to delays that may stem from local terrain challenges, staffing shortages, or coordination issues. While the govt succeeded in fully deploying all survey machinery — including 1,500 RTK units and 200 RTS devices procured through a six-lot tender — workforce mobilisation remains incomplete. Out of the proposed 1,593 surveyors and 2,500 helpers to be hired on contract, only 1,338 surveyors and 1,967 helpers were brought on board so far. The rest are being recruited in phases through the employment exchange system. With only 105 villages reaching a critical publication stage, the mission remains at a crucial midway point. At the current pace, the digital resurvey is in all likelihood set to miss its target. The goal of completing all 1,550 villages by Nov 1, 2026, appears increasingly unrealistic and may remain a distant dream unless drastic course corrections are made.


Time of India
3 hours ago
- Time of India
One from the heart, fatherless kids donated piggy bank money to Kargil
Chandigarh: Two children, Srishti (8) and Akshay (5), in faraway Indore broke their piggy banks as the war raged on the Kargil heights. Missing their father terribly, who had passed away in a tragic accident in 1994, the children offered all they had in savings to the soldiers, each donation amounting to a Rs 2 currency note. Hand-made cards by the two children for the soldiers were added to the offering that sought no reward or hankered for any recognition. Their young mother and an educationist, Namrata Ramkrishnan, added a small sum from her side and wrote a hand-written letter to then COAS Gen. VP Malik on July 27, 1999, as a homage to the soldiers. That reached the battling soldiers soon enough, striking at that time an emotional connect of the citizens of India with the guardians of its volatile frontiers. It was their blood that draped the forbidding snows, there were many other children like them whose young fathers had fallen in battle. That letter surfaced after 26 years when Malik, since retired and settled in Panchkula, pulled it out from his archival treasures and posted it on his social media handle. That post reignited memories, triggered a wave of nostalgia for an era gone by, and generated tremendous goodwill for the Indian Army fresh from its latest bouts during Op Sindoor. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Giao dịch CFD với công nghệ và tốc độ tốt hơn IC Markets Đăng ký Undo Malik also posted the official reply he had written to Ramkrishnan on Aug 4, 1999, as also the one penned by then GOC, 8 Mountain Division, Maj Gen Mohinder Puri, UYSM, to the Ramkrishnans on Aug 15, 1999. Such was the overwhelming response created by the surfacing of the three Kargil letters that netizens immediately got down to the task, traced out the Ramkrishnans and secured their elated, grateful replies on Malik's post. As an enraptured netizen commented: "Wow, it's almost like some stuff from Harry Potter. A magic circle is now closed." The Ramakrishan children's innocent, thoughtful and generous gesture recalled the parable of the Buddha, who accepted the offering of half a mango from an old lady with both hands as she had given all she had and without expecting any reward, unlike the wealthy and the kings. "When the Kargil War broke out, I told stories to my children of the challenges that our soldiers faced battling at those daunting heights and weathering those icy climes. I wanted to introduce the concept of the Indian Army to them in a positive manner. My children were very moved by the Kargil stories. At that time, there were a lot of donations and greetings being sent to the soldiers. My children asked me if they could contribute their piggy bank savings to the soldiers," Ramkrishnan, who is now settled in Bengaluru as an educational consultant with her daughter, Srishti, a corporate lawyer, told the TOI. Her son, Akshay, is a mechanical engineer working with Apple Inc in the US. In that letter, Ramakrishnan, who was bravely battling her ordeal as a young widow, wrote to the COAS on July 27, 1999: "My children are deeply moved by what our soldiers have done for our country. They have lost their father in an accident when they were very little and I am trying my best to inculcate good values in them. I am sure that you will understand and appreciate that they don't know the value of money as yet and hence the small amount is enclosed from their own piggy banks. " In response, Malik wrote back to Ramakrishnan on Aug 4, 1999, stating: "I am deeply touched by the sentiments ... Also moving is the gesture by your children of sending their piggy bank money ... I can only wish that every young mother in the country would bring up her children in the manner in which you are doing." A few days later, the young kids were thrilled that Puri replied to them from the smouldering battlefield, stating: "The contents of your letter and good wishes expressed by your children have been disseminated to our brave jawans who have successfully thwarted the attempts of intrusion by the Pak army in our territory. We are all overwhelmed by the sentiments expressed by you and your children." The posting of the Ramakrishan letter on social media by Malik evoked fond memories of that era when people would take pains and burn the midnight oil to draft hand-written missives, and preserve them, too, like Malik had. A postman's son and netizen, wrote on Malik's post: "As the son of a postman, I can understand what feeling used to be poured in letters during Kargil War." Truly, these heartfelt letters to the battlefield carried the soul of the nation. Recalling those eventful weeks of war, Puri, who retired as a Lt Gen and Deputy COAS at Army HQs, told the TOI: "I distinctly remember that letter and piggy bank money. People were sending us droves of letters, and thousands of 'raakhis' for our soldiers with silver threads. I remember that when our soldiers read those missives of love and goodwill, they were happy, proud and motivated, and it energised their morale. They felt that the entire nation was emotionally connected with the war effort and had stood by them. Kargil was a very evocative battle, fought in those beautiful snow-bound ridges and carrying novel battle site names like Tololing, Tiger Hill, Pari ka Talaab, Sando nallah, Batalik, Shangruti, Chorbatla, etc. All over Drass, bloomed those magical yellow roses. Media coverage had brought the battle to the living rooms creating that unforgettable connect, as were the solemn public funerals of fallen soldiers and officers. Unlike the recent four-day war, which was waged as a non-contact battle and citizens did not get a glimpse." Delving on her thoughts and feelings that drove that gesture nearly 26 years ago, Srishti wrote: "My brother and I, too young to truly grasp the value of what we were giving, emptied out our piggy bank - coins we'd been saving for months - wanting to help the soldiers we'd heard so much about. We added hand-drawn cards, our childish way of saying thank you to the brave souls defending the country. There's something incredibly moving about that - knowing that a small act from two children, guided by their mother's quiet patriotism, stayed with someone who led an army through a war. Some letters stay alive, even decades later."