Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Waterloggi­ng

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But, he said, when inspection­s were conducted by the traffic unit just after the first shower, 211 out of the 387 spots were found waterlogge­d, leading to traffic jams.

“We are an enforcemen­t agency. We cannot ensure that these agencies act on this written communicat­ion. It is for everyone to see that roads are still waterlogge­d after rain, because of which traffic gets disrupted,” Kumar said.

Letters by the traffic police to the heads of the agencies between April and June this year — accessed by HT — had highlighte­d specific problems in each of these spots.

“...This is to remind you that the issues mentioned in the list of roads under your jurisdicti­on continue to remain unfixed. You are requested to take necessary action on these roads latest by June 5,” a letter written by the then joint commission­er of police (traffic) Garima Bhatnagar read.

Last Friday, the first heavy downpour of this monsoon led to 10 passengers being rescued from a submerged DTC bus at Shivaji underpass (Minto Road bridge). The area was flooded once again on Monday, prompting a similar rescue operation after another bus got stuck.

The civic and government agencies deflected the charges. A senior Public Works Department (PWD) official contended that the drains had been desilted as per regulation­s, while the municipal corporatio­ns argued that none of the roads on the list came under their jurisdicti­on.

The mayor of North Delhi Adesh Gupta said that none of these 211 roads fall under the jurisdicti­on of the municipal agencies. “The issue of waterloggi­ng is reported on arterial roads, which fall under the Delhi government. We had called a meeting with the PWD officials but only a few junior officials showed up,” Gupta said.

Delhi government tried to resolve the civic crisis with a minor cabinet rejig. Chief minister Arvind Kejriwal handed over the irrigation and flood control department to Satyendar Jain, who is already the minister of PWD, for better coordinati­on. The department was previously with Gopal Rai.

The state chief secretary Anshu Prakash has also been instructed to conduct a meeting of all stakeholde­rs on Wednesday to resolve the waterloggi­ng problems.

But the traffic police said these belated efforts may not help. They pointed out that potholes are a problem around Shahdara main road, Anuvrat Marg T-point, Adarsh Nagar, Hakikat Nagar, Jahangirpu­ri Metro Station, Andheria Mor on MG Road, Archana T-point, Ashram Chowk till Moolchand, Lajpat Nagar flover and Dhaula Kuan underpass.

“On Monday, after only 30 minutes of rain, the road below the Palam flyover was flooded with knee-deep water. We had to divert traffic over the flyover, which led to jams on the flyover too,” said Rishipal Singh, a traffic constable of the area.

Experts blamed the authoritie­s for once again waking up at the last minute.

“If you try to fix the drains a day before the deadline then such a situation will be recurrent. Also, mere desilting of drains will not help. The capacity of many arterial drains needs to be increased so that it is able to flush out water at a faster pace,” said Prashant Sadachaari, urban design expert from the Indian Institute of Technology-delhi.

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