Provide meter based water supply to avoid misuse of water'

[email protected] (CD Network)
May 8, 2012

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Mangalore, May 8: Panchayats must make sure that water supply is monitored to houses via cent per cent meter system said A G Kodgi, Chairman, Third Finance Commission Report.

Chairing a Task Force meet at Dakshina Kannada Zilla Panchayat, Mr. Kodgi demanded an explanation from the officials of the concerned department regarding meter system being followed in the district. On being told that water is supplied to most houses without meter monitoring, he expressed discontentment and asked Shailaja Bhat, President, Dakshina Kannada Zilla Panchayat and Dr. K N Vijay Prakash, CEO, Dakshina Kannada Zilla Panchayat, to convene a meeting at the earliest and direct all Gram Panchayats to adopt meter based water supply to houses.

“There is no water scarcity in Dakshina Kannada district. It is just that water is being misused. By bringing some houses under the meter rule and leaving out others, you are giving scope for misuse of water. There are people who use water for their farms and are not being held accountable since there is no meter and the rest of the village is left without water at the end of the day”, he observed.

Mr. Kodgi also asked officials to ascertain as to how many houses in the different villages have wells and how many are self-sufficient in water. “You must first make a list of how many houses actually need Panchayat water. You also do not have an idea as to how many MLDs a Taluk requires”, Mr. Kodgi pointed out to an official.

He also said on the occasion that there is enough surface water in the district which should be utilized. “Tanker supply and borewells are meaningless systems. They are ways to loot the state treasury. More the number of borewells, the more ground water level will go down”, he said.

A common lapse, Mr. Kodgi said, in the panchayats of various districts that he visited, was the inaccurate information being given to his team.

Dr. K N Vijay Prakash, CEO, Dakshina Kannada Zilla Panchayat, brought to the notice of Mr. Kodgi that a proposal to provide water to 216 villages under the multi village scheme had been submitted to the government.


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News Network
January 27,2020

New Delhi, Jan 27: Non-Muslim refugees from Pakistan, Bangladesh and Afghanistan will have to provide proofs of their religious beliefs while applying for Indian citizenship under the controversial Citizenship Amendment Bill (CAA), officials said on Monday.

The applicants belonging to Hindu, Sikh, Christian, Buddhist, Jain or Parsi faiths will also have to furnish documents to prove that they entered India on or before December 31, 2014.

Those who will seek Indian citizenship under the CAA will have to provide proofs of their religious beliefs and this will be mentioned in the rules to be issued under the CAA, a government official said.

According to the CAA, members of Hindu, Sikh, Buddhist, Jain, Parsi and Christian communities who have come from Pakistan, Bangladesh and Afghanistan till December 31, 2014, due to religious persecution there will not be treated as illegal immigrants and will be given Indian citizenship.

The central government is also likely to give a relatively smaller window of just three months to those who want to apply for Indian citizenship in Assam under the CAA, another official said.

Some Assam-specific provisions are expected to be incorporated in the rules to be issued for the implementation of the CAA.

Assam chief minister Sarbananda Sonowal and his finance minister Himanta Biswa Sarma had made a request about a fortnight ago to keep a limited period window for applying under the CAA and also incorporate some other Assam-specific provisions in the CAA rules.

The move comes in view of continuing protests against the CAA in Assam that have been going on since the legislation was passed by Parliament in December last year.

There has been a growing feeling among the indigenous people of Assam that the newly enacted legislation will hurt their interests politically, culturally as well as socially.

The Assam Accord provides for detection and deportation of all illegal immigrants who have entered the country after 1971 and are living in the state, irrespective of their religion.

The protesters in Assam say that the CAA violates the provisions of the Assam Accord.

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News Network
March 13,2020

Bengaluru, Mar 13: Karnataka Health Department is planning to set up a separate hospital for COVID-19 so that the affected can be kept in quarantine at one place.

Presently, it is in the process of setting up separate isolation wards for COVID-19 cases at eight Bengaluru hospitals.

Minister for Medical Education K Sudhakar said on Friday that he has already discussed the idea of a separate facility for COVID-19 cases, so that those isolated, can be kept at a single location to contain the spread of the virus.

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News Network
July 22,2020

Bengaluru, Jul 22: Karnataka Governor Vajubhai Vala, had appointed five persons to the Karnataka Legislative Council, which remained vacant, including former ministers H Vishwanath and C P Yogeshwar, here on Wednesday.

In a Raj Bhavan communique issued here on Wednesday, it was stated that the Governor had accepted the names suggested by the Chief minister B S Yediyurappa, to fill the vacancies in the Upper House.

Apart from H Vishwanath, and Yogeshwar, the others who were nominated to the Council, were former MLA Bharathi Shetty, Shantharama Budna Siddi, and Talwar Sabanna.

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