Darjeeling, July 3: The Darjeeling
municipality has signed a memorandum of agreement with the state
government to revamp the drinking water distribution in the civic area.
The Rs 192-crore project will be implemented once the Centre gives its nod for the funds.
Amar Singh Rai,
the chairman of the Darjeeling municipality, said according to the
memorandum of agreement signed with the state urban development
department in Calcutta recently, the Centre would be approached to
provide 80 per cent of the funds for the project under the Jawaharlal
Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission.
According to the
project report, the municipality would construct 30 water tanks to cover
all 32 municipality wards of Darjeeling.
“The project also
entails setting up of 14 pumping stations, relaying the entire water
pipe line network and introducing water meters both for commercial and
domestic purposes,” Rai said.
“According to the
agreement, the state government will give 15 per cent of the grant,
while five per cent of the total cost will be borne by the Darjeeling
municipality. The state government will approach the Centre for the
remaining 80 per cent of the funds,” Rai said.
“The ground work
has been done and the state government is looking at getting funds under
the urban integrated development scheme for small and medium towns.
This scheme falls under the Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal
Mission. The detailed project report has already been finalised,” Rai
added.
The civic body has decided to streamline the Darjeeling water distribution system as it is currently in a complete mess.
The present water
supply network was laid in the 1930s and 1940s and has become haphazard
over years with the addition of new connections. Moreover, there are no
metres for both private and commercial buildings at present.
“We are of the
opinion that almost 40 per cent of the water lines in the town are
illegal. Once the system is revamped, we are confident there will be no
illegal connections in the town. A proper system would also ensure that
water will flow evenly to all consumers,” Rai said.
At the moment,
there are complaints that during summer, some houses get water almost
all day, while the supply is available to others only once a week.
The civic body is
taking the initiative to revamp the distribution network at a time the
Balasun drinking water project is nearing completion.
The Rs 55.86-crore Balasun project was first mooted in the early 1990s to rid Darjeeling of its perennial water scarcity.
The foundation of the project was laid on February 19, 2006, and the commissioning was delayed because of several factors.
The state’s public
health engineering department, which is supervising the scheme, had
earlier cited political instability in the hills and the failure to
obtain a no-objection certificate from the army to lay pipes in the
military areas of Jalapahar and Kattapahar in Darjeeling as reasons for
the delay.
“The army has
already given its permission to lay water pipes in its area. There is a
slight modification and pipes will now be laid through the Alubari road,
instead of the road leading to the army cantonment at Jalapahar. The
work is currently on and the project should be completed within a few
months,” said Rai.
The Balasun
project has been envisaged to supply two million gallons of water a day
to Darjeeling from the Balasun river through two pumping stations.
The project is
supposed to ensure the supply for 16 hours a day. The Balasun water will
be first pumped to two lakes at Senchel, from where it will flow to
three reservoirs, two in St Paul’s area and one at Rockville.
Of the three
reservoirs, two are already part of the present distribution system. The
third one is being built in St Paul’s area.
The Telegraph
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