This story is from April 30, 2013

15 more buildings locked & sealed

Fifteen more buildings were locked and sealed on Monday by the city corporation as part of the ongoing drive against buildings violating approved norms.
15 more buildings locked & sealed
COIMBATORE: Fifteen more buildings were locked and sealed on Monday by the city corporation as part of the ongoing drive against buildings violating approved norms. In all, the city municipal corporation has sealed 27 buildings since Saturday. Twenty-eight more buildings are in the fray. Local Planning Authority (LPA) is expected to start acting against high-rise buildings in its purview from May 3 after the list of buildings in violation of norms is finalised.
LPA had earlier identified 146 illegal buildings but are presently confirming whether any further rectification had been carried out by the violators before starting action on these structures.
"We are now compiling a list of commercial buildings in the city from 2007 onwards to verify the total number of violators in the city," said S Sivarasu, deputy commissioner, Coimbatore municipal corporation.
The corporation armed with a list of 55 illegal buildings, which were served notices six months ago, began its lock and seal operation soon after four women died in a major fire at a commercial complex here at Lakshmi Mills junction on Thursday. The civic body officials focussed on commercial buildings on TV Samy Road, Saibaba Colony, Kamarajar Road, Trichy Road, Mettupalayam Road and Dr Nanjappa Road. The drive began on Saturday with the corporation sealing 12 under construction buildings.
"We are focussing on all new buildings that are being erected against the building plan that was approved from the town planning section of the corporation," said a senior corporation official.
The corporation is preparing a list of violators based on the property tax assessments. Stern action will be initiated against those commercial buildings in the coming days. The civic body is also planning to crosscheck whether 85 buildings previously sealed, were reopened after rectification.
"We have to now verify whether those building owners had actually taken any corrective measures or were allowed to resume activities through some negotiation with the concerned officials," said an official involved in the lock and seal drive.
Building owners are given a 30-day deadline, from the date of sealing, to initiate corrective measures as per the approved plan. If they fail to do so, a report has to be forwarded to the LPA on the basis of which demolition action is initiated. However, presently, both the corporation and LPA have not been meticulously following up on their lock and seal drives. Consequently, building owners have been able to resume construction activities without obstacles.
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