Citizens take bus today to popularise Priority Bus Lane system between Silk Board and Marathahalli!

Nimbus Express
Citizens take bus today to popularise Priority Bus Lane system between Silk Board and Marathahalli! 1
Police Commissioner Bhaskar Rao, BMTC chief C Shikha and actor-activist Chetan (in front) travelled by bus today. Picture courtesy: Srinivas Alavilli

Several citizens and resident welfare groups are participating in a ‘bus yatra’ today aptly called ‘Nimbus Express’ to promote the new Priority Bus Lane system of the Bangalore Metropolitan Transport Corporation (BMTC). The project began on November 15, where the left lanes are marked out only for buses and ambulances, and anyone else encroaching this lane will be penalised.

The idea is to increase the average speed from 10-20 kilometres per hour, so that the six lakh population that works in around this part of Outer Ring Road uses buses and abandons their vehicles that are congesting this important thoroughfare, and causing both air and noise pollution.

If the bus lane is successful, one can expect the traffic density on ORR to be considerably reduced. Therefore, the residents are asking every worker to keep their vehicles behind and hop on the bus from either Silk Board or Marathahalli bus stop today. Already, there are several citizens who have reported that their travel time was halved by this new initiative. Whitefield Rising, the residents group says, “Regular bus commuters say the #BusPriorityLane has helped. Commute time has reduced. It is the VIP corridor for the common man.” Ofcourse, there are some misgivings about this move too. Says Sujoy Batabyal: “First build the infrastructure for bus passengers. Foot over bridge should be there every 100/200 meters for crossing the road. Trucks and lorries should not run on the Outer Ring Road, only then can it be more successful.”

Nonetheless, what is gratifying is that the residents are popularising this move wholeheartedly by coming on to the roads and holding placards to educate the vehicle users to stop encroaching the bus lanes for smoother movement of BMTC buses. “Today, from Eco Space in Bellandur to Agara in HSR Layout, it took me just 10 minutes,” says HSR Layout resident Lalithamba BV. “If 1000 people use the buses, it’s 1000 less cars on the road. Imagine how much space 1000 cars can take compared to 20 buses?” A few days before, citizens took to the streets holding placards and asking them to use buses instead. If the ridership goes up, the buses will increase proportionately. If they fail, the service could even be withdrawn. Srinivas Alavilli, co-founder, Citizens for Bangalore called all CEOs to opt for buses by saying, “India will be a developed nation when CEOs take the bus.”

To support this citizen initiative, police commissioner Bhaskar Rao, Sandalwood actor, BBMP Commissioner BH Anil Kumar, BBMP Additional Commissioner D Randeep, Joint Commissioner (Traffic) Ravikanthe Gowda, BMTC Director (Security & Vigilance) Anupam Agarwal, BMTC chief C Shikha, and activist Chetan also travelled with the public today. This BMTC initiative is supported by BBMP (Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike), BTP (Bengaluru Traffic Police) and DULT (Directorate of Urban Land Transport).

If Metro, Metrolite, suburban rail, and priority bus lanes work the way they are envisaged, much of the pollution, congestion and traffic chaos can come down. That should be the government’s first priority.

Parents of Bangalore’s first Bicycle Mayor injured in ‘city of cars, not people’

sathya sankaran's father
Parents of Bangalore's first Bicycle Mayor injured in 'city of cars, not people' 2
Parents of Bangalore's first Bicycle Mayor injured in 'city of cars, not people' 3
Pictures courtesy: Sathya Sankaran

By Qamar ZJ

Despite cries for pedestrian-friendly roads and city infrastructure, Bengaluru continues to be mismanaged by an apathetic corporation and an even-more disoriented state government, irrespective of which party occupies the highest seat. The latest diatribe against such a bad road infrastructure came from the city’s first Bicycle Mayor Sathya Sankaran. Calling it the ‘city of cars, not people’, Sathya gave the examples of his parents who fell victims to Bengaluru’s appalling road infrastructure only recently. 

Tweeting to the city police and BBMP Commissioner, Sathya wrote: “After the bad fall my father had on Sanjaynagar Main Road, it was my mother’s turn near New BEL Road bus stand. (She) Tripped over construction material left all over the place. This is a city for cars not people.”

The twitterrati was quick to react to this latest development by wishing his parents speedy recovery. In addition, they shared their thoughts on the city’s civic woes.

Citizen activist Srinivas Alavilli, the co-founder of Citizens for Bangalore, said, “We have become a city of machines and people have no place left. We shall take it back.”

The proactive Whitefield Rising resident group agreed with Srinivas by stating, “Our streets are strewn with debris, garbage, potholes and missing slabs.”

Vinay Kamble wanted to know if the government can be sued for this terrible incident. If you have the same question, yes, you can, if the injury happened due to a pothole, an open manhole or drain. In a recent case, the Karnataka High Court ordered the BBMP to compensate one such victim.

Vinay Sreenivasa had a similar story to share. “My mum in law also hurt her knee on a badly-laid footpath on Malleswaram 15th Cross. Unless we fix our pavements, we fail all the elderly and differently-abled in our city, and all of ourselves.”

Rajkumar Dugar recommended one measure that could rectify this issue. “This problem will reduce the day we have names of BBMP engineers and contractors displayed at every road with penalty clause for any damage to road. Citizens are made to cough up for the slightest mistake. Why not these people too?

Reacting to the incident, a representative of Save Harlur campaign made a stark statement: “This city is not even made for cars”. Another resident asked chief minister YS Yeddiyurappa to “transfer all inefficient officers”.

Only Balaji had an ironic twist to the controversy by questioning Sathya’s mission of sustainable mobility by saying, “And you have been misleading gullible people to cycle on such dangerous roads.”

 

 

 

 

Youngster tweets, resolves a problem and makes Rs 500!

Arun Bothra

Dipika Bajpai, the award-winning and dynamic former Deputy Conservator of Forests in Bangalore, praised a middleman the other day. Actually, it was a boy. She was reacting to an impressive story shared by Bhubaneshwar IPS officer Arun Bothra who summed up the tale by saying, “We are a nation of middlemen.” And Dipika responded with: “What a novel and nobel way of employment.”

Why are these civil servants so impressed with the boy, you ask? According to Bothra, this youngster apparently helped a senior citizen’s legal issue by tweeting about it to the cops. After looking at the grouse on Twitter, Bothra apparently invited the harassed citizen to his office, and resolved the issue. But what surprised him most was the passing remark by the elderly gentleman. “While leaving he told that a young boy in his area tweets for others. Charges Rs. 500/- for every resolved issue,” tweeted Bothra.

Clearly, where there is an opportunity, there is money to be made. The tweet received over 238 comments, was retweeted over 600 times and registered over 2500 likes.

However, Bothra did clarify that only 5-10% of complaints are resolved through Twitter. The rest is through the respective police stations.

Here are some of the best comments on Twitter about this boy’s side venture:

Aishwarya P: On a positive side, we can appreciate the boy for using his skill and time to earn money and also enabling others to solve their issues. After all, what he is rendering is also a service. I believe he is much better than those who depend on parents or govt for money.

Sitanshu Mahapatra: The Boy is the Entrepreneur of the Year👋🏾👋🏾👋🏾

Sandip: Is he mentioned anywhere that he is doing social service? If not, then he is doing nothing wrong. You must have heard the dialogue “if you are good at something never do it for free”.

Arun Chopra: He’s making money out of his education while doing social service, better than selling pakoras.

C J Karira: He saw a business opportunity! Fifty years ago, letter writers sitting outside GPOs did a similar job… only difference is that paper sheet has become smartphone and pen the finger.

Syeda Sabaun Noor: Wow!!! This thing is making us less of a community… Everyone is doing a side business.. sad.

Jay Jagdev: These jobs carry more respectable names like Advisor, Consultants…

Koramangala-Ejipura flyover work resumes; BBMP clears bill of contractor

koramangala-ejipura flyover
Koramangala-Ejipura flyover work resumes; BBMP clears bill of contractor 4
Photo courtesy: BBMP

Much to everyone’s relief, work on the Koramangala-Ejipura flyover has resumed after BBMP cleared the contractor’s bills.

The work on the flyover had stoped for a few months as the bill was not paid by the civic agency. However, with the new government and new BBMP commissioner BH Anil Kumar, all pending works are being expedited. One such project was this flyover.

Announcing this move, BBMP Commissioner BH Anil Kumar also tweeted that “a strict directive has been issued to complete work by engaging more workers. Hon’ble MLA @RLR_BTM has acknowledged for resolving the same”. We do hope that MLA Ramalinga Reddy does his bit to expedite this.

Avoid 24th Main during peak hours: BWSSB’s pipeline work in progress

Avoid 24th Main during peak hours: BWSSB's pipeline work in progress 5
Avoid 24th Main during peak hours: BWSSB's pipeline work in progress 6

 

Congestion is going to continue on 24th Main Road for the next fortnight as the Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage Board (BWSSB) is laying a pipeline from Lotus Hospital to KPTCL junction.

 

While the pipeline is now laid from Lotus Hospital to KPTCL junction, the levelling of the road is only pending now. BWSSB officials informed us that the asphalting work of the dug up stretch will take up two weeks to complete.

 

What is throwing a spanner in the works are the rains. The work was supposed to have finished by now but for the rain gods. Expect traffic jams during peak hours, particularly in front of Purva Fairmont on 24th Main and at the KPTCL junction. It’s best to avoid that area between 6pm and 9pm as we come across jams around this time.

Residents Watch impact: BDA Complex flyover service road gets fixed overnight

hsr layout roads

Within 24 hours of writing about the sad state of the service road under the flyover that was neglected for over two years, the BBMP has fixed the road with a fresh coat of tar.


They have not just filled the pothole, but the entire portion of the problematic stretch to ensure that water does not stagnate. We thank the BBMP for keeping their word with Residents Watch and coming good on their promise.


Once the state government grants the money for the road development works for the city, we could see the entire stretch from Silk Board to Iblur being relaid. But until then, this is a good stop-gap arrangement.

Residents Watch impact: BDA Complex flyover service road gets fixed overnight 7

Residents complain of cell reception issues in HSR

hsr layout cell reception
Call drops and ‘out of range’ complaints are rising in HSR Layout. Airtel appears to be the biggest offender to some, while others say that Vodafone is just as bad. The worst, some believe, is actually Jio. “It’s great for internet, but no good to call somebody,” said one resident. “Therefore, I have Jio as my secondary phone for internet usage and Vodafone for phone calls.”
 
 
Residents complain of cell reception issues in HSR 8
 
 
“I changed from Vodafone to Airtel because of cell reception issues, but Airtel is just as bad,” complained yet another user in HSR Layout. “When people call me, they get fed up and wonder if I have switched off the cell or my phone’s battery is dead. I get to know that they called when I get missed call notifications.”
 
When users complained to Airtel, they said that they would promise to fix it within a few days, but nothing actually happens. The story repeated itself with Vodafone as well. As for Jio, you can’t do much about it as all the phones are being routed through the internet. And only phones with Volte can use Jio, and even then, call drops, and reception quality is pathetic.
 
The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India is doing its best to remedy this situation for many years now. Things are improving in some areas but going from bad to worse in others. Lets hope that things get better, because we at Residents Watch believe that when hope floats, magic happens.

 

Want to turn a Govt school, into a model institution? You can do your bit

Somasundrapalya Govt School
Want to turn a Govt school, into a model institution? You can do your bit 9
Want to turn a Govt school, into a model institution? You can do your bit 10
Want to turn a Govt school, into a model institution? You can do your bit 11
The residents plan to make the Somasundrapalya Government Primary School into a model school. The school has recently been painted by a charitable organisation, but there is more to be done.
 
“If anyone is keen to volunteer and teach spoken English to the kids, they can contact me,” says Lalithamba BV. “If we citizens join hands, wonders can happen. Even 1 or 2 hours per week is good enough.”
 
The school has an open platform to conduct events. The principal is seeking funds, so the stage can be closed on three sides and make it rain-ready.
 
You can reach Lalithamba at 94480-63776.