With CRMP on hold, monsoons could bring back potholes for city commuters
The Hindu
With CRMP on hold, monsoons could bring back potholes for city commuters
Monsoons are around the corner, when the city’s best roads could give in under the stress of incessant rains and water stagnation. The threat of potholes and bad patches looms large for the city’s commuters, with the State government sitting on the proposals for comprehensive road maintenance programme (CRMP).
Three months have passed since the Greater Hyderabad Municipal Corporation (GHMC) has submitted the proposals for extension of CRMP for five more years, after approval by the standing committee. The government is yet to take a decision on the same.
The CRMP involves participation of private agencies in the road maintenance, which has yielded good results since introduced in 2019-2020. The fresh proposals included more road length than before, and proportionate cost escalation by 50%.
During Phase-I of CRMP, over 800 kilometres of major city roads were given out for private maintenance, at an initial estimated cost of ₹1,827 crore for a five-year period, starting from 2020. Though de-silting of stormwater drains, sanitation and greenery too were included in the proposals, the de-silting component was later removed, and mechanical sweeping was included which brought down the expenditure.
Officials from the GHMC inform that the final spending on the CRMP Phase-I turned out to be only ₹1,300 crore. However, the fresh proposals cleared by the standing committee place two options before the government.
The first option is to bring 744.22 kilometres of road length under CRMP with a total outlay of ₹2,491 crore for the coming five years. Alternatively, the road length may be enhanced to 1142.54 kilometres with a cost estimate of ₹3,825 crore for five years.
“We have included important approach roads apart from the major thoroughfares in the enhanced road length,” an official informed. Besides, the proposals also include de-silting of the stormwater drains and maintenance of greenery, which add up to the cost, he said.













