Staff Reporter :
CIVIC ISSUES IN DHANTOLI
8 new hospitals in Dhantoli Compounding the situation, it was revealed in the court that dhantoli is set to welcome eight new hospitals. This surge in healthcare facilities is expected to further strain the already overburdened residential area. With numerous hospitals already operational, the addition of these new facilities is anticipated to worsen the ongoing parking and traffic problems for the local residents
THE Nagpur Bench of the
Bombay High Court has
formed a Joint Inspection
Committee (J IC). The committee will oversee actions by
the Nagpur Municipal
Corporation (NMC) and the
City Police related to parking
spaces, hospitals, and various
public issues in the area. The
move is aimed to ease life of
Dhantoli residents from
hapazard parking, illegal vendors, and civic issues.
The newly established Joint
Inspection Committee will be
chaired by Devendra Pradhan
(61), the Secretary of Dhantoli
Nagrik Mandal, Architect
Paramjeet Singh Ahuja as a
member, along with representatives from the NMC and
the City Police.
Justice Nitin Sambre and
Justice Abhay Mantri have
directed both the NMC and
the City Police to suggest suitable members for the committee and their respective
roles. The committee’s inaugural meeting is scheduled for
August 26, where they will
finalise their agenda and operational model.
Additionally, the court has
mandated that the minutes
of each meeting be formally
recorded and submitted.
During the hearing on
Wednesday, Advocate Ashwin
Deshpande raised serious
concerns about the ongoing
inefficacy of the NMC’s efforts.
He underliend that despite
the NMC’s affidavit stating
they are taking action, the
problems persist.
Specifically, he noted that
hawkers often return to the
same areas after NMC
operations conclude, and that
hospital parking spaces are
inadequate.
Adv Deshpande also reported that hawkers have occupied parking spaces meant for
hospital use which create traffic disruptions.
The court expressed frustration over what it perceived
as the NMC’s lack of action and
orally instructed the NMC’s
counsel to file an affidavit from
the Municipal Commissioner
addressing gross violations of
building plans.
Justice Sambre orally
demanded that the NMC provide names of officials responsible for oversight and specify the actions that would be
taken against those failing to
address these issues.
This is not the first time
these issues have been
brought to the court’s attention. During a hearing in June,
the court was shocked to learn
about encroachments by hospitals on parking spaces in
Dhantoli, with encroachments spanning between
3,000 and 5,000 square feet.
Despite claims from the
NMC’s counsel that these
encroachments had been
addressed in 2015, the court was concerned that these
structures might have been
rebuilt or that new issues had
emerged.
Complaints also were
raised about some doctors
locking parking spaces and
making the spaces inaccessible to patients and hospital staff.