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Southern States
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Finance panel's special aid for TNSCB
By K. Ramachandran
CHENNAI, OCT. 7. Tamil Nadu's shelter programmes targeting the
poor has received a boost with the Eleventh Finance Commission
sanctioning a Rs.49 crore special assistance to the Tamil Nadu
Slum Clearance Board (TNSCB).
The Board has sought the State empowered committee's approval to
implement schemes for relocating/rehabilitating about 3,200
families living in slums on objectionable locations in Chennai,
Madurai and Coimbatore.
In a departure in urban resettlement strategy, officials involved
in formulating the schemes hope to attain ``dispersed
development'' by resettling the targeted 3,200 families in about
a dozen different locations in the three cities.
Already, the TNSCB is implementing two resettlement schemes at
Okkiyam Thoraipakkam, south of Chennai, to rehabilitate about
9,500 families, living on `objectionable locations' or those
affected by laying of the MRTS alignment. While one scheme to
build 6500 tenements is using a Rs.60 crore grant from the Tenth
Finance Commission, the other to construct about 3,000 tenements
is being implemented with a Rs.37 crore loan from HUDCO.
While as an engineering solution, Okkiyam Thoraipakkam offers
great promise, now on hindsight, officials feel that massing
thousands of dwellers from different urban slums in a single
concentrated point, is turning into a sociological problem. For
those living in different settings to come together and start a
new life in an alien environment about 20 km away from their
original settlement can lead to problems that can be beyond any
engineering solution.
Yet another problem is finding large parcels of land free of
encumbrances to develop big relocation sites. Officials in
development agencies note that one way of getting over this
problem is to find smaller parcels of land in different locations
to resettle the people moved out of objectionable sites.
On a conservative estimate, Chennai has 8,000 plus families
living along the River Cooum, about 15,000 along the Buckingham
Canal, over 9,100 along River Adyar, well over 4,000 families
living on the edge of Otteri Nullah and about 1,800 along
Mambalam Canal. Besides these persons some 32,000 families are
literally living on the edge - on pavements and about 3,000
families abutting the seashore.
Madurai has about 60,000 people living in 208 slums and
Coimbatore about 20,000 families.
In such a situation, the Board hopes to resettle such families in
smaller relocation sites using the lands liberated from
development following the scrapping of the Urban Land Ceiling
Act. The Government has promised to accord priority to the Board
while utilising the old ULC lands.
Development agencies note that of the over 1000 ha of land in
Chennai metropolis, only 40 acres of land can be used by the
Board because of various constraints. The lands are either
encroached upon or their access roads are not upto CMDA norms.
Still, the Board is already in possession of land in certain
locations in Chennai where it has proposed to use the Eleventh
Finance Commission assistance to put up about 2,200 tenements.
In Madurai and Coimbatore, three such sites have been identified
for the Board to build about a 1000 more tenements.
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