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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Wednesday, January 24, 2001 |
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Second BATF summit on February 24
By Our Special Correspondent
BANGALORE, JAN. 23. The second summit of the Bangalore Agenda
Task Force (BATF) will be held on February 24, exactly a year
after the first summit, to review the works taken up and ensure
planned growth of the City.
Making this announcement to presspersons here today after a
meeting of the BATF and the stake-holders, the Chief Minister,
Mr. S.M. Krishna, said efforts were on to fulfil the commitments
made at the first meeting.
The Chairman of the BATF, Mr. Nandan Nilekani, agreed that not
all the commitments given had been fulfilled, but the momentum
had been kept up. ``A huge amount of goodwill for the City has
been built up and this is unprecedented,'' he said.
He said that at the second summit, the location of which was yet
to be decided, the BATF would make available to the public
information on the facilities that had been completed and the
ones on which work was under way. A BATF summit would be held
every six months, he added.
The highlights of the public-private sector initiative included
completion of the Outer Ring Road by the Bangalore Development
Authority and introduction of the property tax self- assessment
scheme by the Bangalore Mahanagara Palike. There had been a sea
change in the upkeep of the City, but that was not enough,
Mr. Nilekani said. The Chief Minister said that the Bangalore
Water Supply and Sewerage Board (BWSSB), which had promised to
regularise 46,300 unauthorised water connections, had regularised
37,700 and disconnected 9,000 connections. This, he said, showed
that the agencies were on track. The fact that he was present at
the meeting for three hours was testimony to the fact that he
supported the endeavour, he added.
Mr. Nilekani said that the commitments made by the private sector
were being fulfilled. Ms. Sudha Murthy had made a commitment of
Rs. 8 crores for building toilets in the City and the design for
them was being worked out. Similarly, the Rs. 2- crore offer made
by Infosys for traffic management was being utilised, he added.
Mr. Krishna said efforts were on to evolve a protocol to prevent
arbitrary digging of roads. The Government insisted that the
agencies digging up roads restored them to good condition, he
added.
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