Municipal Mess ; It's a Fairly Common Scene No Matter What Part of Urban India You Are In: It Rains for a Few Hours and the City Comes to a Grinding Halt. Waterlogged and Potholed Roads Hold Up Traffic, Backing Up Cars for Miles.

Summary


It's a fairly common scene no matter what part of urban India you are in: it rains for a few hours and the city comes to a grinding halt. Waterlogged and potholed roads hold up traffic, backing up cars for miles.

Narrow streets in neighbourhoods get clogged, and if the water doesn't get into your living room, there's good chance that the road- corner garbage dump has been washed up to your doorstep. The point: urban governance in India is in a shambles and the debate over it has been focussed, justifiably but impractically for the common man, on structural changes. How about, instead, building public pressure on what the municipalities are supposed to do anyway which is to keep the city drainage system unclogged, clean roads and neighbourhoods, ensure water in taps and run schools and hospitals for the poor people.By now, we know what's wrong with our municipalities. Apart from being largely corrupt and sclerotic, they are caught up in a maze of rules and regulations that blur responsibilities. For example, state governments often have authority that supersedes that of the municipality, and politicians and bureaucrats often use that to their advantage.Most municipalities are also broke. They just don't have the money needed to create the sort of infrastructure their growing cities need. For example, in Haryana's so-called Millennium City , few of the fancy apartments that sell for a few crores of rupees have municipal water connections.Most of them make do with groundwater, which is fast depleting. The city of high-rises also has just a few fire tenders, and street lighting is scarce. The irony is that the state has earned thousands of crores of rupees from the real estate boom that has taken place in Gurgaon.

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Municipal Mess ; It's a Fairly Common Scene No Matter What Part of Urban India You Are In: It Rains for a Few Hours and the City Comes to a Grinding Halt. Waterlogged and Potholed Roads Hold Up Traffic, Backing Up Cars for Miles.

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