Key Points

Chief Minister Siddaramaiah personally inspected Bengaluru's deteriorating roads amid public outrage over potholes. He suspended an executive engineer for substandard repair work that involved loosely filling potholes without proper tar surfacing. The government has allocated Rs 13 crore per kilometer for a 5-kilometer road stretch and set a one-month deadline for complete repairs. Siddaramaiah also addressed waste management issues, warning officials of action if garbage isn't cleared immediately from roadsides.

Key Points: Siddaramaiah Inspects Bengaluru Roads Issues 1-Month Repair Deadline

  • CM suspended executive engineer for poor quality pothole filling work
  • Government spending Rs 13 crore per km for 5 km road stretch
  • Road repairs must be completed before end of rainy season
  • Action threatened against officials for waste management failures
2 min read

Pothole menace: CM Siddaramaiah inspects B'luru roads, gives 1-month deadline to repair

Karnataka CM Siddaramaiah conducts Bengaluru road inspection, suspends engineer over poor pothole repairs and gives 1-month deadline for complete road restoration.

"Instructions have been given to fill the potholes in the city roads, and this work must be of good quality - CM Siddaramaiah"

Bengaluru, Sep 27

Following the backlash over poor infrastructure of roads and pothole menace in Bengaluru, Karnataka Chief Minister Siddaramaiah conducted inspection of the city roads and issued a one-month deadline to repair them and make the roads motorable.

He was speaking to the media on Saturday after conducting city rounds to inspect the condition of Bengaluru’s roads.

Instructions have been given to fill the potholes in the city roads, and this work must be of good quality. As the road repair work was not carried out properly, the concerned Executive Engineer has been suspended, CM Siddaramaiah stated.

Action has been taken because potholes were only loosely filled with jelly and left without proper tar surfacing. The white-topping work is underway on Hennur Road, and its maintenance is the responsibility of the respective contractor, the CM stated.

The government is spending Rs 13 crore per km for a 5 km stretch. A one-month time frame has been given to complete the road work, and instructions have been issued to ensure that no potholes remain, he stated.

Responding to the concern that potholes are being filled only because of the inspections, he acknowledged that potholes are indeed causing accidents.

However, he added that if road repairs had been carried out during the BJP government's tenure, roads wouldn't have deteriorated to this extent. Necessary steps will be taken to fix potholes before the end of the rainy season, he assured.

When asked about BJP MP Tejasvi Surya's appeal asking people not to participate in the caste census survey, he responded that a petition was filed in court to stop the survey. The survey will be conducted in accordance with the court's directives.

He added that around 10 lakh people have already completed the survey.

In response to a question about waste management issues, the Chief Minister noted that waste is being left unmanaged in several places along the roads. Instructions have been given to remove the waste immediately. If not done, action will be taken against the concerned commissioners and engineers, he warned.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Rs 13 crore per km? That's a huge amount! Hope there's proper transparency in how this money is being spent. We need permanent solutions, not just filling potholes before monsoon ends.
S
Sarah B
As someone who moved to Bangalore recently, the road conditions are shocking. Good to see the CM taking responsibility and suspending officials for poor work. Accountability is key!
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Arjun K
Why only act when there's media pressure? This should have been done months ago. My bike skidded last week because of a pothole near Koramangala. Thank God I wasn't seriously injured.
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Vikram M
The political blame game continues... BJP didn't do it, Congress will do it. Meanwhile, citizens suffer. Just fix the roads properly, that's all we ask for. No more excuses please!
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Michael C
Appreciate the CM addressing waste management too. The garbage piled up near Whitefield roads is becoming a health hazard. Hope they follow through on all these promises.
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Ananya R
One month deadline sounds good, but will they maintain quality? Last time they filled potholes, it washed away in the next rain. Need proper engineering solutions, not quick fixes. 🚧

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