The Indian Express: Mumbai: Thursday, February 08, 2018.
Shitole
further said he sought information under Right to Information (RTI) about
accidents and deaths on the contentious stretch to build pressure on the
authorities for construction of the service road.
A 150-metre
stretch of a service road in Kamothe on the Sion-Panvel Highway was at the
centre of a discussion at a high-level meeting in Mantralaya Tuesday. According
to data availed under the Right to Information Act, the stretch of the road yet
to be constructed claimed 28 lives in 59 accidents since 2013, the year the
road opened to traffic. Residents allege that their repeated demands to
complete the construction of the road had fallen on deaf ears.
The locals
said there was a road connected to the highway for going towards Vashi. After
the PWD constructed a flyover on the highway in 2013, it was supposed to
construct around a 150-metre stretch of service road to give connectivity to
the highway for residents going towards Vashi.
However, it
was not constructed then and the work has not progressed as it falls under the
Coastal Regulation Zone (CRZ) area, residents claim.
As the
service road remains incomplete, the chowk under Kamothe flyover has turned
into a traffic nightmare, motorists and residents of the area complain. They
say they either have to drive in a ‘no entry’ road to take the Kamothe flyover
or go all the way around about 1.5 kilometre to Kalamboli to get on the
highway.
Dividers have
been placed under the flyover to regulate vehicular traffic. However, it leads
to traffic congestion as there is an autorickshaw stand close to it. Besides, a
portion of the service road taken up for concretisation has been dug up but the
work has been abandoned without completing it. Amol Shitole, a resident of
Ajinkyatara Society in Kamothe, said, “We have written several letters
demanding the service road but neither the authorities nor elected
representatives paid any heed,” said Shitole, a member of Ekta Samajik Seva
Sanstha.
Dr Rupesh
Vadgaonkar, another resident and member of Ekta Samajik Seva Sanstha, said that
many school buses are also forced to go in the no entry direction to take
Kamothe flyover to reach Kharghar, which is an educational hub. “We live with
the worst fears in our mind everyday hoping that school children will return
home safely,” said Vadgaonkar, adding that the area under the flyover should be
beautified and the subway connecting to Kalamaboli, which is waterlogged,
should be open.
Shitole
further said he sought information under Right to Information (RTI) about
accidents and deaths on the contentious stretch to build pressure on the
authorities for construction of the service road. “The RTI reply revealed that
there have been 28 deaths in 59 accidents from 2013 to 2017. Then, we took up
the issue with the authorities with this data and threatened to hold a rasta
roko on the highway at Kamothe on February 3,” he said. After the residents
threatened a rasta roko, the authorities convened a meeting at the Mantralaya
to discuss the issue on Tuesday.
“We have been
told by the department that the service road should be completed by March. We
are working on it,” said a PWD official adding that they have appointed a
consultant M/s Fine Envirotech Engineers for a ‘No Objection Certificate’ from
the environment department.