Archive for October, 2006

Some Random Thoughts: Salvation for Pune Roads

October 26, 2006

Some Random Thoughts: Salvation for Pune Roads

Have a look at this blog..

Cheers till then
Pushkar

Salvation for Pune Roads

October 25, 2006

Hi All,

At last Pune roads will finally get redemption and salvation by the 30th Nov 2006. That being the date fixed by the Mumbai High Court for getting all roads pot hole free. Thats provided the officials in the Pune Municipal Corporation deem it reasonable to comply with the court orders..

Some friends have already tried gandhigiri and not seen success till date. Gandhi Ji has told us that it the opponent attacks you and slaps you on one side of the face show him the other. He obviously has not told us if the A**H@!$ attacks you the second time. Then I guess it time to revert back to Circuit Giri.

Lets see who becomes circuit this time – The People or the Court. Either ways we need more Circuits to get some sense into the heads of these “Government Servents”. Maybe some Circuit procedures to perforate their heads will help in the Osmosis Process…

Cheers till then,

Pushkar Bhat

Pune Roads and Gandhigiri

October 12, 2006

Hi,

For the past some months folks in Pune in India have been experiencing a roads system which seems to be terminally ill. Whats even more surprising is the fact that Public representative refuse to acknowledge the problem. Seems to be a strange case of infrastructural euthanesia :(.

All this after the city having spent a record amount for improving roads just last year. BTW couple of weeks ago I had the honor of watching a movie called "Lage Raho Munna Bhai". The central theme was on how a seemingly mentally unwell protogenist gets flowers and cards from people at large which ultimately brings about the change of heart.

Seems the chief commissioner of the local government in his capacity as the custodian of the roads should be getting a truck load of roses with a get well soon card. Roads in Pune need to get better from their seemingly terminal illness. "Lage Raho Munna Bhai" showed that there is always hope even for cronically ill people.

BTW folks the Municipal Commissioner and "the city fathers" are still waiting for their truck load of roses and I am still an eternal optimist.

Cheers

Pushkar Bhat

Sent from my BlackBerry® on Airtel

Mobile Blogging works

October 11, 2006

Hi all,

Just completed testing the mobile bloging thing on Blogger Beta. It works well :).

Good news is that u can now expect some blogs from the road,

Pushkar

Sent from my BlackBerry® on Airtel

Testing mobile blogging on the Blogger beta

October 11, 2006

Hi all,

This is my attempt to Test mobile blogging on the Blogger beta.

Cheers

Pushkar

Sent from my BlackBerry® on Airtel

An Encouraging and Heartning Story

October 8, 2006

Permalink http://www.indianexpress.com/printerFriendly/14277.html

Print Story
Now Gujarat poor don’t need to chase schemes, they will come home

Sreenivas janyala

Posted online: Sunday, October 08, 2006 at 0000 hrs IST

AHMEDABAD, OCTOBER 7After several years of waiting, Railiben Babubhai Naik, who belongs to a below-poverty-line (BPL) family, got a house under the Indira Awas Yojna in Ankli village of Devgadh Baria in Dahod district. She was entitled to the benefits for a decade but never got them.

Sigabhai Valjibhai Vasawa of Jharvani village in Nandod Taluka of Narmada district needed Rs 10,000 to set up a provision store. He got it under the Swarnajayanti Gram Swarozgar Yojna (SGSY) in August when officials of the Directorate of Rural Development Agency came looking for him.

Thanks to a new delivery system developed by the Gujarat Rural Development Department, schemes meant for BPL and poor families are now reaching the people they are meant for. “From treating the schemes as ‘quotas’ or ‘numbers’, we are giving them ‘faces’. And the faces belong to the poorest,’’ Vipul Mitra, secretary rural development, says.

‘‘Now, instead of the beneficiaries running from pillar to post to get the benefits, the taluka development officers go in search of them. That is because the system has already generated a list, identified the names of the most needy, with their addresses. The TDO has to go find them and give what is due to them,’’ says Mitra.

In the process, ministers, MLAs, local politicians, panchayat presidents and sarpanchs have been eliminated from the system. Recommendations are not entertained. “If your name is not in the list then you are not entitled to the benefit. If it is there, then you don’t need a recommendation,’’ says taluka development officer of Devgadh Baria, Dahod, J H Patel who will be handing over 200 houses this December. The system can generate any data based on combinations: All SC families in a taluka, all dalit families not having pucca houses or all families not having means of livelihood. Depending on whom you want to target, the system generates a list.

The database is on the web and almost all districts and talukas of Gujarat now have access to the Internet. The State-Level Bankers Committee which has 5,000 branches of various banks has already adopted the system, using it to disburse government co-sponsored loans for both farm and non-farm activity.

J M Patel, chief manager of State-level Bankers committee (SLBC), Gujarat, says: “It is a very realistic database that is 85 to 95 per cent correct.’’

Over three years, 68.65 lakh rural households in the 18,000 villages of Gujarat were surveyed by enumerators who gathered details of families without revealing the motive. Then, using a selection criteria of 13 parameters prepared by the Planning Commission and using a methodology decided by the Union Ministry of Rural Development, the households were graded.
Earlier, BPL lists were prepared using income as the main criteria. The Gujarat Government added more parameters to make it more comprehensive_average availability of normal clothing, two square meals a day, type of house, status of household labour force, type of indebtedness etc.

As per the 16-point parameters, families were graded_ a score of 16 points or less: very poor, 17 to 20: poor. When the list was finally ready this July, the Gujarat Government had a ready reckoner at hand: 18,706 households scored 5 or less (poorest of the poor), 1,73,388 households scored 10 or less, 8,50,413 households scored 15 or less and 10,93,534 scored 16 or less.
And, the first target was staring in the government’s face_18,706 households with a score of less than 5, in desperate need of help. The system generated their names and addresses and taluka development officers and gram sevaks were sent to find them.

That is how Railiben of Ankli village in Devgadh Baria got the house under Indira Awas Yojna, or, Shantaben Dalabhai Koli is set to receive a house in Jhaab village in the same taluka.
From December, starting with a person or family graded as the poorest and lowest in the new system, the poor will be directly given the benefits After making an informal presentation to rural development secretaries of the states last month at New Delhi, the Gujarat Rural Development Department is making a formal presentation to Union Minister of Rural Development Raghuvansh Prasad Singh on October 9.
But complaints have started pouring in. An MLA who sent 200 applications of his supporters demanding benefits complained that only three persons he recommended were in the list of BPL or poor families. “He claimed our list is incorrect,’’ says D M Baria, of Dangs DRDA. “But now we don’t have to bend over backwards under political pressure. Whenever a politician calls me to recommend, I just show the list,’’ he says.