Jun 14, 2013
Soon: no shops, only pushcarts on Marina
The Corporation plans to restict hawkers on the beach in a bid to clean up the sands.
The Chennai Corporation is planning to relocate all hawkers on Marina Beach and permit only pushcarts instead.
As
per the proposal, the relocation process will restrict all 1,489
hawkers to the sands near the Triumph of Labour Statue and the Gandhi
Statue. The shops will form a pattern perpendicular to Kamarajar Salai.
As
many as 960 pushcarts in six rows will extend to a length of 362 metres
near the Triumph of Labour Statue and 540 pushcarts will be positioned
on the sands near the Gandhi Statue in six rows covering a length of 200
metres.
Each of the pushcarts will be two metres
long and 1.2 metres wide. Five pushcarts will be grouped and positioned
in blocks stretching 10 metres in dimension. Each block will be one
metre away from the other.
The total number of
pushcarts on the Marina will be restricted to 1,500. Hawkers with
identity cards will be allowed to do business during the prescribed
time, with wares in pushcarts only.
The civic body
presented a ‘Scheme for regulation of hawkers on the Marina’ to the
First Bench of the Madras High Court comprising Acting Chief Justice
R.K. Agrawal and Justice M. Sathyanarayanan on Thursday, when a writ
petition by K. Balaji, president of the Gandhiji Consumer Forum, came up
for further hearing.
The petitioner said the
condition of Marina Beach was pathetic. The authorities had allowed
hundreds of small shops and vendors all over the beach and . Because of
the authorities’ failure to enforce the Food Safety and Standards Act,
substandard and unhygienic food was being sold on the beach.
The
civic body admitted that hawkers were scattered over the sands and
garbage was spread all over the Marina. The regulation and relocation of
hawkers was necessary.
Under the scheme, five drop
gates would restrict hawker movement. Security personnel would be posted
to operate the drop gates. The hawkers would be asked to use dustbins.
to prevent garbage accumulation on the sands. The Corporation would levy
a charge for the use of the space occupied by pushcarts. on the sands.
The civic body would also periodically review the arrangement and modify
conditions if necessary. Appropriate action would be taken against
violators.
The petitioner’s counsel sought time to
file his objections and also to suggest an alternative mechanism to
relocate the hawkers. Following this, the Bench posted the matter for
further hearing after a week.
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