Citizen trust to maintain Puttenahalli Lake

Puttenahalli Neighbourhood Lake Improvement Trust becomes the first residents group in Bengaluru to take charge of maintaining a lake.

Official note sent by the Puttenahalli Lake Trust to members and citizen volunteers.

The lake then, as on Jan 2009. Pic courtesy: PNLIT

We are happy to tell you that our Puttenahalli Neighbourhood Lake Improvement Trust (PNLIT) has signed an MOU yesterday with the BBMP to maintain Puttenahalli Lake, JP Nagar. This gives official status to what most of you would know PNLIT has been doing ever since the BBMP began rejuvenating the lake from Feb. 2010. 

Your donations helped us plant 300 trees, hire a gardener and a sweeper. We greatly appreciate your support to a citizens’ movement which began in a very small way to save the lake over three years ago (see photographs attached) to now reach this point of formal recognition of our effort. 

You may also be interested to know that ours is the only lake in Bangalore to be managed by a residents’ group.

Ours being a people’s initiative, the challenge is even more formidable but not impossible. It only requires a little participation from you as residents in the locality to do your bit – go for walks around the lake. If you see someone throwing down rubbish or breaking off a sapling, stop them. If you are a regular walker, join us as a volunteer to supervise the sweeper, gardener and security guards.

The lake now, as on May 2011. Pic courtesy: PNLIT

Individual contributions and corporate donations to PNLIT will go towards cleaning the lake and its surroundings, planting more saplings, maintaining the garden around, securing the lake, feeding inlets to drain water into the lake, upkeep of the toilets, providing drinking water and lots of other things… as we go along. We have received the status of Charitable Trust from the IT Dept and expect to get 80G exemption very soon.

At present, ours is a seven member team with individual personal and professional commitments and need all the help we can get from you to fully transform the once shrinking threatened lake, the only one in our locality, into a haven for birds, butterflies and fish. We have already come a long way, the rest of the journey will not be difficult with your help.

Comments:

  1. Usha Srinath says:

    Way to go, PNLIT. very impressive. You know these kind of partnerships (BBMP with residents groups) is pretty rare. How do we get in touch with you?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Similar Story

The trials of being an urban farmer in Delhi’s Yamuna floodplains

Agriculture around the Yamuna is strictly prohibited due to river pollution concerns, but where does that leave the farmers?

The river Yamuna enters Delhi from a village called Palla and travels for about 48 km. There is a part of the river, approximately 22 km long, between Wazirabad and Okhla, which is severely polluted, but for the remaining 26 km of its course, the river is still fairly clean. The surroundings serve as a habitat for a large number of trees, flowers, farms, birds, and people who have been living here for as long as they can remember. They are the urban farmers of Delhi-NCR, and they provide grains and vegetables for people living in the city. Although farming…

Similar Story

Save Pulicat Bird Sanctuary: Civil society groups appeal to TN government agencies

Voluntary organisations have urged the government to settle the claims of local communities, without reducing Pulicat Sanctuary's borders.

A collective of 34 civil society organisations and more than 200 individuals from Tamil Nadu and across the country have written to the Thiruvallur District Collector, Additional Chief Secretary of Environment, Climate Change and Forests, Chief Wildlife Warden, and the Tamil Nadu Chief Minister Cell to protect the Pulicat Bird Sanctuary for ecological and social reasons and settle the rights of people without reducing the sanctuary's boundary. The voluntary groups have urged the government to initiate the settlement of claims of local communities residing in the 13 revenue villages within the Pulicat Birds Sanctuary boundary limits. Excerpts from the letter:…