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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Friday, December 15, 2000 |
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Southern States
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Cabinet okays Mundargi irrigation project
By Our Special Correspondent
BANGALORE, DEC. 14. The State Cabinet today decided to take up
the Mundargi-Singatallur Irrigation Project at an estimated cost
of Rs. 595 crores, to irrigate about 1,67,000 acres of land in
the drought-prone areas of Bellary, Gadag and Koppal districts.
Briefing presspersons on the Cabinet decision here today, the
Minister for Major and Medium Irrigation, Mr. H.K. Patil, said
that the project would be taken up by the Karnataka Irrigation
Corporation, and this year it had provided Rs. 79 crores for the
project. He said a canal of about 139 km would be constructed on
the left bank and 32 km on the right bank to utilise 18 tmcft. of
Tunga waters for the project. The 18 tmcft. would include one
tmcft. to be made available for the Vijayanagar Steel Plant. Mr.
Patil said that the project would be completed in three years and
the funds raised from market borrowings. The project, he
mentioned, had been talked about for nearly 12 years now.
The Minister said the Government would provide Rs. 5.37 crores
for the modernisation of the Ramaswamy Anicut in Koppalu village
near Srirangapatna. This year, Rs. 3 crores was sanctioned for
the project. The Minister of State for Information and Publicity,
Prof. B.K. Chandrashekar, said the Cabinet had decided to give a
one-time approval for teachers teaching in high schools to teach
in junior colleges, provided they had a post-graduate
qualification. This approval, he said, would benefit 419 teachers
in the State.
The Cabinet also decided to sell the ailing State-run Mysore Lamp
Works Limited for which it will be floating a global tender. In
case there were no worthwhile bids, the Government would offer
voluntary retirement scheme (VRS) to its employees and wind up
the company. The tender process might take about three months,
Prof. Chandrashekar said.
There are about 1,500 employees in Mysore Lamps which has an
accumulated loss of Rs. 46.93 crores.
The Minister for Agriculture, Mr. T.B. Jayachandra, said the
Government was seized of the falling prices of farm produce and
had decided to pressure the Food Corporation of India to procure
farm produce. The Chief Minister, he said, would be meeting with
officials of the FCI tomorrow to sort out the issue.
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