Councillors demand more borewells in the wards

Inundated with water woes, city corporators ask for more borewells in their wards. BWSSB and Mayor announce drilling of seven borewells in new wards and four each in old wards.

In the two-day BBMP council session on water, as each corporator spoke about the water problem in their wards, they all had one demand in common. Borewells. And more borewells.

"I need 20 borewells in my ward", said one. "Give me 10-15 borewells", said another. At the end of the session, as BWSSB Chairman P B Ramamurthy announced the various projects taken up by the Board, the corporators requested him to mention the immediate plan of action to address the water crisis and demanded a response to how many borewells were going to be installed immediately.

Corporators and Mayor at council session for water

Mayor S K Nataraj and BWSSB Chairman P B Ramamurthy announced that borewells will be drilled in each ward to tackle the looming water crisis. Pic: Vaishnavi Vittal

Ramamurthy announced that the water board will instal three borewell in new wards and two in old wards. Similarly, Mayor S K Nataraj announced that four borewells will be installed in new wards (erstwhile CMC areas) and two each in old wards.

All this much to the chagrin of the corporators who waited two days to listen to an announcement from the Board, hoping for some good news.

Through the two-day session, Corporators expressed their anguish about water-related problems in their ward. Dr M S Shivaprasad, BJP, Aramane Nagar (Ward 35), said that even after digging borewells, motors and pipelines were not attached. "It is difficult to contact the engineers with regard to this borewell problem", he said.

Another corporator, K Poornima, Congress, Basavanapura (Ward 53) said that out of the 65 borewells in her ward, only 30 are in working condition. "Another ten have very little water", she said. In Ward 71 (Hegganahalli), Govindegowda M B (Independent), said that out of the 55 borewells, only eight are functional.

Corporators also complained that borewells were disconnected because electricity bills weren’t paid. They requested the BWSSB Chairman and the Mayor to look into this as well.

Gangadhar H N, BJP, Rajgopal Nagar (Ward 70) said there is not a single BWSSB borewell in his ward. Shivakumar K (Independent), Shantala Nagar (Ward 111) said that despite promises made by officials to drill borewells in his ward, not a single one had been installed so far.

Borewell drilling

Seven borewells will be drilled in newly-added wards and four in old wards. File photo

Others like Lavanya Ganesh Reddy, Congress, Lingarajapura (Ward 49) said that out of the 20 borewells in her ward, only eight are in working condition. This is also the same ward where, last year, eight-year-old Abhishek was washed away in a storm water drain. Lavanya reminded the officials about the incident and appealed to them to not allow a repeat of this again, by being prepared for the monsoons.

Borewell water only source for outer areas

The requests for more borewells came from corporators of newly-added wards where Cauvery water is not supplied. K N Anjaneya Reddy, Congress, Kadugodi (Ward 83) said he does not even receive water through tankers in his ward. "Water level in the borewells have gone down", he said. In Singasandra (Ward 191), half of the borewells have dried up, said corporator Kavitha Babu Raj (Congress). Neither does the ward receive Cauvery water.

BWSSB Chairman Ramamurthy said the new areas will continue to be dependent on borewells till the end of 2011 or beginning of 2012 when the Cauvery IV stage II phase project is completed.

Ramamurthy also said that repair works of borewells will also be taken up, division-wise, within the next few days wherein the water board’s Assistant Executive Engineers (AEE) and Executive Engineers (EE) will contact the respective ward corporators to identify the borewells.

RELATED
RELATED

Related Articles

BWSSB to start hiring to redress water crisis
Thirsty BBMP corporators pour their hearts out

Comments:

  1. Sanjay Vijayaraghavan says:

    Borewells are not the answer. There is also no good solution in the short time frame. Instead of these band aid solutions, it is important we invest the money required and do good, fundamental things which have been articulated in many places.
    However,I can understand this demand for borewells. Without water, that is the only immediate solution people can think of. It is the responsibility of the BWSSB to also educate these corporators.

  2. Narasim Katary says:

    Genuine leadership appears to have gone AWOL on a basic human need.

    It would be good to see the authority take the bull by the horns and forcefully implement long-range plans for adequate water supply. Sad that the Silicon Valley of India is plagued by lack of adequate water.

    Deep wells are acceptable only if they are seen as interim steps.

    Is it unpatriotic to suggest that maybe the time has come for city leaders to learn lessons from experience of Israeli efforts at water supply and conservation?

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

Will prioritise ORR, suburban rail: Mansoor Ali Khan, Congress candidate, Bangalore Central

Mansoor Ali Khan claims that it's time for a 'guarantee wave', not a 'Modi wave'. He says he will prioritise education and infrastructure.

Mansoor Ali Khan, from Indian National Congress (INC), is all set to contest for Bangalore Central Parliamentary Constituency this Lok Sabha Elections. In an interview with Citizen Matters, Mansoor spoke about his plans for his constituency if he is elected as MP and the key issues he would like to address. Excerpts from the interview: During a recent campaign run, you mentioned that you will “ensure (central) funds come for projects on time.” What are the projects that you will prioritise?  I am very clear that I will prioritise infrastructure projects like the Outer Ring Road (ORR), suburban rail and…

Similar Story

Stalled projects, discrimination by Centre hurting Mumbai: Incumbent MP Arvind Sawant

Arvind Sawant is contesting for the third time from Mumbai South and is confident of winning the seat for Uddhav Thackeray's Sena.

Arvind Sawant, who has served two terms as the MP from Mumbai South, is raring to go as he prepares to fight for a third term. His opponents are a divided house and the official candidate is yet to be announced here. Leaders such as Rahul Narwekar, Mangal Prabhat Lodha, Yeshwant Jadhav are eyeing this seat. So is Milind Deora, who has already been nominated to the Rajya Sabha now and had previously lost to Sawant in the two Lok Sabha elections in 2014 and 2019.  Mumbai South is comprised of the assembly constituencies of Colaba, Mumbadevi, Byculla, Malabar Hill,…