
‘Chittoor ahead of other districts in land, housing and milk yield’
The Hindu
Collector M. Hari Narayanan speaks to The Hindu on completing one year in office
Chittoor district has made rapid progress on various fronts last year, notwithstanding the turbulence witnessed in the form of high COVID-19 incidence and furious floods.
The district administration received a pat from the State government for having several firsts to its credit, especially for the progress on land resurvey, housing and milk yield, points out District Collector M. Hari Narayanan.
Chittoor has spent ₹348 crore on housing, the highest by any district in the State. As many as 1.06 lakh units of the 1.78 lakh houses sanctioned in the first phase of PMAY-YSR Urban scheme have already been grounded, of which 97,000 houses are in various stages of progress.

Currently, only the services in the 32 series stop at the section of the road adjacent to the Broadway terminus, temporarily closed on account of reconstruction work. Small traders association tells R. Ragu that ensuring the services now accommodated at the temporary terminus at Island Grounds stop at NSC Bose road would benefit visitors to the markets in Parrys

The silent reading movement in the Mylapore-Mandaveli-RA Puram area showed up first at Nageswara Rao Park around two years ago, with modest ambitions, when Balaji launched it along with other reading enthusiasts from the region. This initiative has now moved parks, and seems to set to get entrenched in one. Due to renovation work at Nageswara Park, the reading session became irregular. With the Nageswara Rao park work gaining more surface area, it had to be shifted elsewhere. And it seems set to continue with a newly discovered green patch in RK Nagar in the Sundays to follow.











