Green cover upsets locals!

| July 4, 2012

Green_cover_upsets_locals_postnoon_news

Mohali (Punjab): At a time when the Punjab government has launched a comprehensive ‘Greening Punjab’ drive across the state, residents of Mohali town, adjoining Chandigarh, are upset over its green cover.

The horticulture wing of the Greater Mohali Area Devel­opment Authority (GMADA) is receiving scores of complaints from residents saying that the green cover is causing problems. The green cover in the town, designed on the lines of ‘City Beautiful’ Chandigarh, comprises medicinal plants which have become fully grown trees in the past over three decades.

GMADA executive engineer-horticulture Harbans Singh Dhaliwal told IANS: “We receive a lot of complaints every monsoon and winter season about these trees. During the monsoons, they fall during thunderstorms and cause destruction to property while during winter, these trees block the sunlight.”

The sunlight blockade is a major problem for residents, especially for houses where elderly people live. “For the elderly, exposure to sunlight is a must,” Dhaliwal said.

H.S. Mand, a senior resident of Phase 3, said: “We want that the trees should be cut down after a particular height till a permanent solution is found for this problem.”

Residents, after waiting for authorities to take action, sometimes take matters in their own hands.

The residents mainly complain of three varieties of trees.

Terminalia Bellirica commonly called a ‘Baheraa’, Pterosp­ermum Acerifolium called ‘Kanak Champaa’ by people here and Sterculia Alata, are the trees planted years ago to enhance the green cover of the Mohali region during the development years of the town in the late 1970s and early 1980s. “Over the years, the trees have grown big, attaining 40-45-foot height,” Mandeep Singh said.

Local authorities have to tackle jurisdiction problems in dealing with the green cover. While some sectors and phases fall under GMADA, others come under the civic body.

Even though the residents are eager to make the changes, the social activists and experts oppose the idea of the change.

Leading Botanist and Panjab University professor R.K. Kohli disagrees with the proposition of replacing the trees. Kohli told IANS: “It’s not the fault of the tree. If the tree is of medicinal value, there must be a reason why these trees have been planted. Neem tree is good but they (GMADA) should not plant it everywhere. There should be a proper plan and the planting should be done properly. The plantation should be site-specific.”

Against the 33 percent forest cover norm for states, Punjab has a low forest cover of only seven pe­r­cent. The ‘Greening Punjab’ campaign will see 400 million tree saplings being planted across Punjab in the next eight years.

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