A long wait to occupy slum tenements

‘The Ukkadam project will be ready for occupation in July’

C. Sujitha has been living at Kumarasamy Colony for long. That should be at least 25 years plus, says the kindergarten school teacher. Her house is very close to the Muthannankulam, on a government land.

There are hundreds of people like her who live along the water body in the fervent hope that the promise of better, concrete-roof house will be a reality. The residents were told six years ago that they would soon get concrete house in the form of Tamil Nadu Slum Clearance Board tenements, she says.

That was when the corporation enumerated the people who lived along the water body to identify them as beneficiaries for the housing scheme. But then nothing much happened.

The Board engineers say that the residents will have to wait till July this year as 448 of the 1,840 houses in the Ukkadam project will be ready for occupation. Work to complete painting, electric wiring, underground drainage, storm water drain, etc. are nearing completion.

Once that is done, the Board and the corporation will handover the tenements to the residents, they say.

The Board took up construction of 2,904 houses in Ukkadam for the corporation. The objective was to provide alternative and better housing.When it took up construction, the target was to complete the work by 2013 and handover the tenements that year or in 2014. But the sinking of a block of ground plus four-storey structure in 2010-11 complicated things.

The Board sources say that the State Government constituted two independent teams that suggested that the Board bring down the number of houses by demolishing the top two floors. In short, the teams asked the boards to demolish the fifth and fourth floors. This reduced the total tenements by 1,064 and brought down the number of houses to 1,840.

The Board sources say that it has completed the demolition process and was readying the roof in over 15 blocks. They will be ready by October 2016 for occupation.

Ms. Sajitha says that people like her have heard several such explanations and seen extended deadlines. “Only when I enter the new houses, will I believe that I’ve been given one. Until then it just remains a promise.”

Newsletter

AJK College Hosts Workshop on Building Resilient Systems

The Department of Computer Science with Data Analytics at AJK College of Arts and Science conducted a workshop on "Build...

Construction worker sentenced to 20 years rigorous imprisonment for sexually assaulting 9-year-old girl

A 50-year-old construction worker from Kangeyam, Tirupur district, was sentenced to 20 years of rigorous imprisonment fo...

Bomb Threat Email Sent to Coimbatore International Airport, Confirmed as Hoax

An unknown person sent a bomb threat email to Coimbatore International Airport on Tuesday night. CISF's Bomb Detection a...

EASA College Student Wins First Place in Tamil Oratory Competition

G. Santhapandi, a second-year ECE student from EASA College of Engineering and Technology, Coimbatore, secured first pla...

Farmers Protest Against Substation and High-Tension Tower Projects Near Tirupur

Over 100 farmers and villagers staged a demonstration in front of the District Collector's office in Tirupur, demanding...

Millions of Liters of Water Wasted as Tirupur's Fourth Joint Drinking Water Scheme Pipeline Bursts

A burst pipeline in Tirupur's Fourth Joint Drinking Water Scheme has been wasting millions of liters of water for three...