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Dy CM to inagurate Marina Blue Flag by May | Chennai News – The Times of India

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Dy CM to inagurate Marina Blue Flag by May | Chennai News – The Times of India


Status: cleared
Chennai: The 50-acre Marina Blue Flag beach is being prepared with recliners, bamboo shades, and watchtowers for an inauguration by Deputy Chief Minister Udhayanidhi Stalin in the third week of May.
GCC Commissioner J Kumaragurubaran said the fabrication work of toilets, tourist structures, and bath areas is nearing completion. “It will be done in a week. Water sample tests are completed. GCC is setting up information boards on the beach, history, and other details with a map,” he said.
The Commissioner said there may not be any entry costs. “All the barricades stipulated in tender conditions have been removed. The beach won’t be restricted,” he said. “We are hiring a contractor to maintain the beach for three years for Rs6 crore. About 12 sanitary staff will be appointed. GCC will bear the entire cost,” the Commissioner said.
The Commissioner added that Urbaser Sumeet, who is the lowest bidder in waste privatisation in the Royapuram zone, will be given additional responsibility to maintain this part of the Blue Flag beach. “We are also proposing to create another stretch for Blue Flag in the 250-acre Marina,” he said.
The corporation has also introduced online bookings and QR-based payments for the Anna Swimming Pool, near the Blue Flag stretch.
ENDS MSID:: 120703247 413 |





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Ceiling fan falls on faculty member at DU’s Kalindi College – The Times of India

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New Delhi: A ceiling fan fell on the head of a faculty member at Delhi University’s Kalindi College, raising serious concerns about the institution’s deteriorating infrastructure. A video of the purported incident has surfaced online, drawing widespread criticism over the state of facilities on campus. The video circulating on social media shows a woman seated on a chair, visibly in pain with her hands on her head, which was reportedly bleeding. A ceiling fan can be seen lying on the floor in a completely dismantled state. According to the college administration, the fan fell on an assistant professor, who was immediately taken to the hospital.
“She is fine now and no serious injury has been reported,” said college principal Meena Charanda. “Repair work is already underway in the building. We have written to the engineering department of Delhi University requesting a report on the structural condition of the college building. Ours is an old structure, built in 1967, and we have asked whether repairs are sufficient or if the building needs to be razed entirely.”
The faculty member is an assistant professor at the college’s computer science department and could not be contacted for comment. The incident took place in the academic block, according to the college’s students’ union. The students’ union has submitted a memorandum to the principal demanding an investigation of the incident and audit of the college infrastructure.
Slamming the incident in a video on his social media handle, DUSU president Ronak Khatri demanded that the DU administration constitute a committee to identify all buildings in need of urgent repairs. He also called for completion of repair work within the next three months and asked that a report in this regard be made public.





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Bengaluru: 9 innovators selected to combat antimicrobial resistance in environmental settings | Bengaluru News – The Times of India

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Bengaluru: The Centre for Cellular and Molecular Platforms (CCAMP), in collaboration with the UK department of health and social care’s Global AMR Innovation Fund (GAMRIF), announced nine winners of its AMR Challenge 2024-25. This initiative aims to tackle the growing threat of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) in environmental settings.
Launched in Aug 2024 under the India AMR Innovation Hub, the challenge received nearly 200 applications from startups and innovators across India. The selected winners will receive funding and ecosystem support to help scale, produce, adopt, and socially integrate their solutions.
Taslimarif Saiyed, director and CEO of C-CAMP, said the winning innovations address critical challenges in AMR, including point-of-care diagnostics, pathogen screening in farm, fishery, and hospital runoff, wastewater treatment, industry effluent management, and air decontamination in hospital settings.
By 2050, deaths associated with AMR are projected to rise to 10 million annually worldwide. Key contributors include climate change, antimicrobial misuse across the food and agriculture industries, and antimicrobial pollution due to poor waste management practices.
“The GAMRIF-CCAMP partnership aims to develop contextual solutions specifically for low and middle-income countries (LMICs) to help bend the AMR curve in environmental settings. This collaboration positions CCAMP alongside major global AMR stakeholders in GAMRIF’s funding portfolio, such as Combating Antibiotic Resistant Bacteria Biopharmaceutical Accelerator (CARBX) and Global Antibiotic Research and Development Partnership (GARDP),” a statement issued here read.
The Winners:
■ Indian Institute of Science (IISc): MONZymes-based technology for degrading residual antibiotics from effluent wastewater through advanced (photo)catalytic activity.
■ Foundation for Neglected Diseases Research (FNDR): A cartridge-based device with a patented mixture of activated charcoal and plant-based materials to deplete antimicrobial residues from wastewater.
■ Biomoneta Research Pvt Ltd: qAMI (Quantitative Airborne Microbial Index), combining detection of airborne total microbial load and pathogenic microbes in hospital settings using an AI/ML platform.
■ DNOME Pvt Ltd: A pocket PCR device for rapid on-field detection of antibiotic-resistant bacteria and resistance genes in aquaculture farms and wastewater sources.
■ Vividew Innovations Pvt Ltd: A novel combination of membrane filtration and advanced photocatalytic oxidation to remove residual antibiotics and resistant bacteria from hospital sewage treatment plants.
■ Diagopreutic Pvt Ltd: A colorimetric method for detecting residual antibiotics and pathogen identification in aquaculture farm effluents, based on differential nitroreductase activity.
■ Mylab Discovery Solutions Pvt Ltd: Rapid pathogen detection from wastewater using in-house nucleic acid extraction and multiplexed quantitative RT-PCR technology.





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Soon, health checkup a must for students of govt schools | Mumbai News – The Times of India

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Mumbai: Soon, annual health check-ups will be mandatory for students from all govt, govt-aided, municipal and zilla parishad schools. Health cards will be created for all students and details from every health check-up will be uploaded in an online app developed by the public health department. If students require further medical treatment after the health check-up, all necessary advanced medical treatments, surgeries will be provided free of cost.
The govt issued a resolution on Tuesday announcing the implementation of the National Child Health Programme in the state through the public health department. The programme was launched nationally to improve survival, development and quality of life of children in the age group of 0 to 18 years through early detection of diseases, deficiencies or disabilities. During a meeting held in the state to discuss the implementation of the programme, the state’s public health department was instructed to develop an online app to create health cards for all students. The health cards will have up-to-date information on all students.
Schools have been asked to inform parents to be present during the health check-up. They will also have to ensure that health examinations are conducted using safe and updated technology by the medical team under the national programme. After the health check-ups, principals have been asked to maintain records of any ailments and treatments, and once a tracking system is made available, schools will also have to keep online records. Principals should also ensure 100% attendance during these health examinations and if any students need further treatment at the taluka or district level hospital, arrangements should be made.
As per the national programme, screening teams established at the taluka level, consisting of two medical officers, a pharmacist, and a nurse, will be visiting Anganwadi centres and schools to examine the children.
To implement the student health check-up programme more effectively, committees formed at district levels will be preparing a year-round schedule for health examinations across all talukas. If students require further medical treatment after the check-up, necessary planning should be done and regular reviews will have to be conducted.





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