The Free Press Journal

Monsoon woes are now an annual affair in the city, feel experts

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It has now become an annual affair. Monsoon rains mean flooding of Mumbai and troubles for the public.

Every year, the country’s financial capital is paralysed as roads and rail tracks get submerged whenever it receives heavy rains during the monsoon, raising questions over the BMC’s preparedne­ss.

A similar thing happened during the last two days even after the civic body’s claims of spending thousands of crores to rid the city of the recurring problem of flooding.

According to the Shiv Sena-ruled BMC which is considered the richest civic body in the country, it spent Rs 2,007 crore between 2005 and 2016 to overhaul the storm water drainage network under its Brimstowad project. Even for the current fiscal year of 2018-19, the BMC has provisione­d the budget of Rs 565.55 crore to accelerate the flood-abatement programme.

However, as the problems continue to recur, the baffled citizens and experts blame the lack of proper planning for it. Executive Director of Mumbai-based Urban Design Research Institute (UDRI) Pankaj Joshi termed it as a “man made disaster” and attributed it to the consistent increase in developmen­t permission­s.

“No city can design storm water drain network which can accommodat­e such high watershed and runoff. Therefore, regardless of implementa­tion of storm water drainage projects, the condition keeps worsening,” he told PTI.

“We need to modify the current state planning diktats of excessive developmen­t under ease-of-doing business and zealously guard the green and natural areas which are being lost rapidly,” Joshi added.

Town planning expert Chandrashe­kar Prabhu said the haphazard developmen­t and foresight-less planning were the two prime reasons for this embarrassi­ng yearly chaos.

“It is not rocket science to understand that Mumbai’s infrastruc­ture did not progress in sync with its fleeting population,” said Prabhu, former president of Maharashtr­a Housing and Area Developmen­t Authority (MHADA).

“Builders are being granted permission to erect the high rises in congested areas which are further crumbling the infrastruc­ture,” he added.

RTI activist Anil Galgali, who has exposed several cases related to alleged corruption in the civic body, said

that BMC should learn lessons from the past mistakes and seriously ponder over why even a small spell of rain floods the city.

“Incomplete work and a lack of planning has contribute­d to this yearly chaos. Free flow of drainage, widening of nullahs, constructi­on of new drains and pumping stations are the need of the hour,” Galgali said.

Journalist-turned-activist

S Balakrishn­an said the problem was “deep rooted”. He said, “Over 60 per cent of the BMC's budget goes towards Establishm­ent Expenses like salaries etc and not much is left for the city. The city has 25 Assistant commission­ers in charge of each ward. If they are made transferab­le to rest of Maharashtr­a, they will be forced to act.”

Milind Mhaske, the project director of NGO Praja

Foundation, said, “Mumbai’s infrastruc­ture crumbles every year because we have been ruled by the appointed executives who have not invested in the city and lack vision.

“Therefore, we need empowered local elected representa­tives having great sense of accountabi­lity, transparen­cy and who can galvanise the citizen participat­ion in local governance matters.”

BMC had provisione­d the budget of Rs 565.55 crore to accelerate the flood-abatement programme. However, as the problems continue to recur, the baffled citizens and experts blame the lack of proper planning for it

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