Tuesday, May 25, 2021

2,000 tonnes of veggies unsold on Day 1 of intense lockdown



2,000 tonnes of veggies unsold on Day 1 of intense lockdown

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Chennai:25/05/2021 

A day after brisk sale, around 2,000 tonnes of vegetables remained unsold at the Koyambedu wholesale market on Monday. Thousands had thronged the facility on Sunday to stock up ahead of the week-long total lockdown that began on Monday. Vegetables were sold only to vendors on minitrucks authorised by Greater Chennai Corporation on Monday and these trucks will be the only source for residents to buy vegetables till the lockdown ends on May 31.

The Koyambedu Wholesale Market Complex (KWMC) received around 3,000 tonnes of vegetables on Monday, 2,000 tonnes less than Sunday’s arrivals. While around 1,000 tonnes of vegetables were sold through the 2,600 designated minitrucks on city streets, the rest remained unsold as customers and retail, wholesale traders denied entry to the facility, which was overseen by Greater Chennai Corporation officials directly.

S Chandran, secretary of Federation of Wholesale Vegetable Market Associations, said Koyambedu will receive around 300 supply trucks bringing in around 3,000 tonnes of vegetables on Tuesday too. “We do not see any drop in supply of vegetables to the city,” he added.

S S Muthukumar, president of the Koyambedu Semi Wholesale Vegetable Traders Association, said the city is unlikely to face any shortage of vegetables till Thursday as people who shopped on Sunday have stocked up enough. “There was substantial sale, both wholesale and retail, on Sunday. So there is no chance of shortage in the coming days,” he said. Demand for vegetables will go up again from Thursday, he said, adding that storing excess vegetables in Koyambedu until then would be an issue.

Univs to hold online exams from June 14

Univs to hold online exams from June 14

Chennai:25.05.2021

Tamil Nadu state universities will conduct online exams for all students starting June 14. The re-exam for students who wrote an online exam in February and regular exam for engineering students studying in even semesters will be conducted from June14 to July 30.

“All universities except Anna University will conduct semester and arrear exams from June 15 to July 15. The exam results will be released before July 30,” a release from the state government said on Monday.

The registration for re-exam for students who didn’t appear for the February exams started on Monday and will be open till June 3. Online exams for first year engineering students are likely to be held in August. TNN

Cops crack down on bikers out for flimsy reasons


Cops crack down on bikers out for flimsy reasons

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Chennai:25.05.2021

Police on Monday cracked down on bike riders and others stepping out of homes for non-essential reasons, registering cases against 1,350 people until 6pm. Separately, 1,250 cases were registered against people not wearing face masks and 150 cases registered for not maintaining social distancing.

Two-wheeler riders with genuine reasons were allowed to go after thorough checks. The numbers for the day are expected to go up, as cases will be registered until midnight.

Following instructions from commissioner Shankar Jiwal, the 138 police stations have been divided into 348 ‘sectors’. Roads have been barricaded, with movement allowed only on a handful of stretches to enable police to verify and allow only frontline workers and those with e-passes out on essential purposes.

While e-passes had been issued until May 24 through https://eregister.tnega.org/, a senior officer said that from tomorrow (May 25), new applications have to be filed for passes to ply through the city. “Modifications have been made on the website, and only people with fourwheelers can apply. Entries for two-wheelers will not be entertained,” he said.

On Sunday, police had registered cases against 38 people for violating lockdown norms, and impounded about 78 vehicles including six autorickshaws for violating rules. Police also slapped 2,137 cases against face mask violations and 273 for not maintaining social distancing norms. At Thiruvottiyur in north Chennai, however, several bike riders launched a flash protest on Saturday and Sunday, demanding that police release their seized bikes. The agitators gathered in front of the Thiruvottiyur police station and stayed there for a long time before senior officers intervened and dispersed the crowd.

STRICT MONITORING: Vehicles being stopped on Poonamallee High Road on Monday for checks of violations

Chennaiites lock themselves indoors day after creating chaos to stock up

Chennaiites lock themselves indoors day after creating chaos to stock up

Only Govt Staff, Those Exempted Are Allowed

TIMES-NEWS NETWORK

Chennai:25.05.2021 

Residents seemed to have finally learned to stay indoors. Most arterial roads in the city and its surrounding areas wore a deserted look for a major part of Monday, in contrast to the chaos on Sunday as people crowded shops to stock up for a week.

Vehicular traffic was witnessed on some roads up to 10am with government staff and those working in other fields exempted from the complete lockdown going to work.

As the day progressed, vehicle movement fell and Anna Salai, Poonamalee High Road, GST Road, GNT Road, Kamarajar Salai, Koyambedu flyover were empty.

On Sunday, Covid-19 response teams of the government were seen in all neighbourhoods warning public that even walkers would be fined. So, on Monday, most residents were holed up in their homes as no shops barring pharmacies and restaurants were kept open in the city. Banks worked with one third of employees.

“There were minor incidents in some neighbourhoods where public moved about casually on interior streets in Royapettah, Mannady, Velachery, to name a few. Our personnel told them politely to stay inside their homes and they obliged,” a police official said.

Apart from law enforcement, civic body teams, food delivery agents and sanitary workers, only a few vehicles were seen on Chennai city roads. Police set up check points along arterial roads like the Anna Salai, Kamarajar Salai to verify if motorists had valid credentials. “The e-registration mechanism should be even more stringent as every other motorist we detained seemed to have availed one. Except for really essential requirements, public should not be allowed epass,” a police official said.

Police warned that those travelling without e-registration or without valid reasons would be fined and their vehicles would be seized. To cater to the needs of public, the civic body has also arranged for mobile vegetable carts. E-commerce firms such as Big Basket, Sunny Bee, Reliance, and Pazhamudir could deliver from 8am to 6pm, the Chennai Corporation said.

STREETS LIE SILENT: A view of Poonamalee High Road near Anna Arch and GST Road near Chromepet on Monday

Pvt hospitals refuse cashless treatment


Pvt hospitals refuse cashless treatment

Ram.Sundaram@timesgroup.com

Chennai:25.05.2021 

Several private hospitals in Tamil Nadu don’t accept Covid-19 patients opting for cashless treatment, complain card holders under the Chief Minister's Comprehensive Health Insurance Scheme (CMCHIS).

Instead, they are admitted on condition that they reimburse the amount from insurers after discharge. This reimbursement amount is no way near the total claim presented, they say.

S A Vetrirajan, a retired commercial taxes department official, said a private hospital in Perambur denied admission to his 65-year-old ex-colleague claiming he was not empanelled under CMCHIS. But official documents suggested he was empanelled 10 years ago. They initially made him pay ₹1 lakh and only after pressure from various quarters allowed the expenditure to be covered under government insurance.

V Devan, vice-president of TN Retired Officials Association, said private hospitals rejecting CMCHIS card holders existed even in pre-Covid times.

The government recently fixed tariff for Covid-19 treatment in private hospitals, with ₹35,000 the daily rate for treating a patient in ICU on ventilator-supported beds. “But almost all major hospitals in Chennai charge at least ₹70,000 a day for this. Even after paying monthly premiums all our lives, we end up paying money from our own pockets to settle hospital bills,” said Devan.

Devan with help from Tamil Nadu Government Employees Association (TNEGA) tried to help a friend who paid ₹1.2 lakh to an Alwarpet hospital despite being eligible for a health cover of up to ₹4 lakh under CMCHIS.

Health minister Ma Subramanian said 890 private hospitals have been authorised to provide treatment for Covid patients under CMCHIS and treatment rates released. “If any hospital violates this, action will be initiated (under Clinical Establishment Act) through appropriate enforcement agency (Directorate of Medical and Rural Health Service.”

CMCHIS is meant for government employees and pensioners whose annual family income is less than ₹72,000.

Monday, May 24, 2021

Banks will function from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.


Banks will function from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

24/05/2021

Special Correspondent CHENNAI

The State Level Bankers’ Committee (SLBC)-Tamil Nadu has said that business hours of banks will continue to be from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., from May 24 to 30, and the branches will function with one-third staff strength, on rotation basis, following the government’s announcement to enforce an intense lockdown in the State.

Working hours of branches will be from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Administrative/zonal/regional/back offices will function as per normal working hours, it said in a communication to banks.

Bank branches will provide basic essential services — cash transaction (accepting deposits and cash withdrawals), remittances, NEFT, RTGS and government business and clearing of cheques, among other things, it said.

Banks need to ensure that all alternate delivery channels like bank ATMs/cash deposit machines/cash recyclers and banking correspondent services are kept fully functional.

All other COVID-19 norms shall be strictly adhered to, it added.

Panic Buying Leads To Crowded Markets, Congested Streets


CHAOS IN MARKETS

Madness on lockdown eve; protocols go for a six

Panic Buying Leads To Crowded Markets, Congested Streets

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

24.05.2021

Traffic on city roads and crowds at shopping hubs on Sunday resembled a festival-eve experience. While panic shopping drove people in huge numbers to grocery stores and markets a day before another week-long complete lockdown kicked in, it also showed that the newly elected government did not learn from the previous government’s mistakes as far as pandemic management is concerned.

Chaos prevailed in crowded market areas such as Kothaval Chavadi, Ambattur, Thiruvanmiyur, Zam Bazaar, and Koyambedu in Chennai where narrow roads and the population density does not allow for Covid appropriate behaviour.

“The efforts of frontline workers all these days are being negated because of policy decisions like this. To blame everything on public indiscipline is also unfair as the authorities gave only one-and-a-half days for people and naturally panic mode creeps in. The decision makers should have thought better,” said S Srinivasan, a resident of Velachery.

Police personnel and mobile teams of Greater Chennai Corporation made efforts to regulate the crowds at various places, but in vain. Meat and fish stalls, neighbourhood grocery stores, supermarkets and bakeries were all crowded since morning and by early evening, most stores had run out of stocks as people bought in bulk.

It also highlighted the digital divide among the population. “I have never ordered provisions online. So, when the government announces a complete lockdown, is it not natural to stock up on essentials?” said K Santhammal, a resident of Madipakkam.

At shopping hubs and other places, physical distancing went for a toss despite warnings that hefty monetary fines would be slapped on violators. Traditionally crowded places like Ranganathan Street in T Nagar, NSC Bose Road in Parry’s and some of the vegetable markets were packed more than usual.

Traders said that most of those flocking to their outlets were not regular shoppers but owners of retail outlets to buy stocks. “We cannot possibly turn away our customers. We try our level best to ensure physical distancing in and around the premises of our shop, but since the roads are narrow, they get crowded,” said a wholesaler at Kothaval Chavadi.

The trader pointed out that though the complete lockdown will be in place for a week, eateries and restaurants will be functioning and retailers need their supply.

Many residents continued to blame the government. “The whole thing could have been avoided. The government could have either announced the total lockdown a week ago or continued with limited restrictions and announced a complete lockdown from the beginning of June,” said M Damodaran, a resident of Royapettah.

NEWS TODAY 07.06.2026