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Defunct rainwater harvesting pits in Gurgaon's Sector 40 trigger waterlogging, dengue fears

Defunct rainwater harvesting pits in Gurgaon's Sector 40 trigger waterlogging, dengue fears

Time of Indiaa day ago
Gurgaon: In Sector 40, rainwater isn't recharging the ground — it's inundating the parks. According to residents, MCG has failed to maintain or expand the rainwater harvesting systems in the area despite repeated waterlogging issues and increasing risk of mosquitoes breeding.
Out of the sector's nearly 20 parks, only six have rainwater harvesting pits, and they too, lie defunct and clogged with silt, residents said.
Instead of seeping into the ground, the rainwater accumulates in low-lying areas of the parks, forming pools that take four to five days to drain, they added.
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"When it rains, as much as 2 feet of water accumulates in parks. This not only wastes precious water but also becomes a breeding ground for mosquitoes and other vector diseases," said RK Mahendru, RWA general secretary, Sector 40.
In July, MCG issued a contract for cleaning rainwater harvesting pits in the area. But residents allege that the contractor abandoned work within just 15 days. "MCG also carried out surveys of parks and greenbelts and marked spots for new pits and upgrades. However, all of this remains on paper. Even the existing pits that were built more than a decade ago haven't been cleaned since," said Abhimanyu Yadav, RWA president, Sector 40.
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Residents said they repeatedly wrote to MCG requesting repairs, cleaning, and expansion of the rainwater harvesting infrastructure, but their complaints yielded no results. With the ongoing monsoon, they fear a public health crisis may be looming. "What's the point of preaching about water conservation when the systems to do so are deliberately neglected?" Yadav added.
Meanwhile, MCG chief engineer Vijay Dhaka said, "I will get the matter looked into and action will be taken accordingly."
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