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Friday, May 31, 2019

Traffic in Bengaluru’s CBD area likely to be affected due to metro work

Civic
The work is part of the Gottigere-Nagavara line of the Bangalore metro, as part of which iconic buildings like Fatima Bakery and Hotel Tom’s are set to be demolished.
Image for representation
Traffic in Bengaluru's busy Central Business District (CBD) area is likely to be affected due to the work taken up by Bangalore Metro Rail Corporation Limited (BMRCL) on the underground section between Vellara Junction and Pottery Town. The work is part of the Gottigere-Nagavara line of the Bengaluru metro. It led to Bengaluru's iconic Fatima Bakery and Hotel Tom's at Vellara Junction shutting shop on Thursday. The two outlets are set to be demolished along with a portion of the All Saints Church in the area. Two fuel outlets, BPCL and the Nagpal Service Station, on Residency Road were earlier shut down in February.  The metro station at Vellara Junction is going ahead despite protests by members of the All Saints'Church. The protestors and commuters feel that the construction work will create a traffic jam in the area. "Traffic on this road is already in a mess during peak hours. We are worried that the metro works will worsen the problems and make the stretch extremely dusty,” said Vignesh, a regular commuter speaking to Times of India.  BMRCL is planning to demolish Fatima Bakery, Hotel Tom's, Daniel Auto Garage among other buildings. Larsen and Tourbo has taken up the design and construction of underground structures.  Meanwhile, metro authorities’ plan to link Bengaluru city to the Kempegowda International Airport still remains unclear after airport authorities reportedly rejected proposals to construct elevated stations near the airport.  “Our DPR clearly states that the two stations at the airport will be elevated. One will be at the entrance near the Sky Garden and another near the terminal. We will look at the plan again and decide whether one of the stations can be at the ground level. Our work is going ahead and only the plan for these stations is on hold,” a BMRCL official told Deccan Chronicle.
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Even if Roe is upheld, abortion opponents are winning

A drip, drip, drip of state restrictions has made abortion harder to obtain.

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Thursday, May 30, 2019

Kohli meets Queen Elizabeth, netizens asks Indian captain to bring back Kohinoor

Social Media
Social media users were quick to term Kohli the 'Kohlinoor Diamond'
Ahead of the 2019 Cricket World Cup, captains of all ten teams participating in the tournament were invited for a gathering at the iconic Buckingham Palace in London.  The ten captains including India's Virat Kohli met Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Harry before the opening ceremony of the tournament on Wednesday.  It was an honour meeting Her Majesty the Queen and Prince Harry at the Buckingham Palace yesterday. @RoyalFamily pic.twitter.com/m552H9tPlt — Virat Kohli (@imVkohli) May 30, 2019 Photographs of the captains shaking hands with the queen in the 1844 room in the palace were shared on social media soon after the interaction. While one photograph showed the queen laughing in an interaction with Kohli and English captain Eoin Morgan. In another photo, the queen was seen seated with all the competing captains. While some social media users wondered what was being talked about, others termed the interaction between Kohli and Queen Elizabeth II as a king meeting a queen.    Great opportunity for Kohli to ask the queen to give our Kohinoor back. https://t.co/4WjW3kzrxj — . (@iamsrktheking) May 29, 2019     #CWC19 to jeet k layenge hi, saath me Kohinoor bhi le aao. #TeamIndia pic.twitter.com/2OzfHhOP2F — God (@TheGodWhispers) May 30, 2019 >p?   U have 2 opts king kohli. Either u have to bring back kohinoor diamond or 2019 worldcup. — chandrashekar R (@chandru22792) May 30, 2019 /p> Others decided to dub Kohli as the 'Kohlinoor.   When you realize India still has the real Kohinoor! IT'S KOHLINOOR. #ICCWorldCup2019 #TeamIndia pic.twitter.com/djkoTDFMII — vikash sharma vicky (@vicky_sbl) May 30, 2019     * When KOHLInoor's brand value is more than Kohinoor itself * #CWC2019 #ViratKohli #ENGvSA pic.twitter.com/MUL4qMI9wN — Harshit Singh (@harshits009) May 30, 2019     When you realize India still has the real Kohinoor! IT'S KOHLINOOR. #ICCWorldCup2019 #TeamIndia pic.twitter.com/djkoTDFMII — vikash sharma vicky (@vicky_sbl) May 30, 2019   Whether the Kohinoor diamond, which was confiscated by the British in the 19th century, returns to India remains in doubt. But there is a chance Virat Kohli and the Indian team comes back to India with the Cricket World Cup trophy from England.  India plays its first game in the competition on June 5 against South Africa. India last won the competition in 2011 on home soil and are one of the favorites to go on and win the competition this year.  Others decided to dub Kohli as the 'Kohlinoo
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How Bandipur officials are attempting to tackle a colonial-era shrub that’s fuelling fires

Environment
Lantana, an invasive weed planted by the British in the 1800s, has evolved from nuisance to threat because of its ability to takeover large swaths of land.
It’s hard to imagine how much of the Bandipur Tiger Reserve is covered in lantana until you see it. As Range Forest Officer Srinivasea RD rode in a government jeep along an entry road in mid-April, it seemed to be everywhere on both sides of the asphalt. When it’s dry and brown, lantana camara -- once a decorative shrub brought to India in colonial times, now an invasive weed known simply as lantana -- looks like giant cobwebs thread across the ground or thousands upon thousands of tumbleweeds looped together amid scattered trees, waiting on a good gust of wind. Lantana has evolved from nuisance to threat because of its ability to takeover large swaths of land. It’s grown so much in the woodland savannas of south India’s tiger reserves and national parks that a small spark can use lantana to explode into a broiling fire, a problem that seems likely to worsen as the region’s temperature rises and monsoon rains become more erratic, leading to longer dry periods. The plant has also crowded animals and other plants out of huge swaths of space in which they used to roam and grow. “These reserves in Karnataka and Tamil Nadu, they have been practically overpowered by lantana,” said BK Singh, former Principal Chief Conservator of Forests for Karnataka. Srinivasea was dressed in the tan hat, tan collared shirt and blue lapels that are the uniform of the Range Forest Officer. He’s in charge of beating lantana back at least 30 meters from either side of the roads, which helps tourists in cars see wandering elephants or deer or warthogs. He then cuts a thick line through the vegetation to hinder the spread of fire. On the drive out to a lantana-clearing area, he asked the driver to pull the jeep over every few minutes so he could shout at people who had parked. A side effect of clearing lantana from tourist areas is that those tourists often clog the main roads, crawling along so people can pull out their cameras and point them at something that’s just darted into the thicket. Clearing lantana by hand is a process of slashing, burning, and ripping. Srinivasea’s team first hacks at the weeds until they sever the plant from the ground. They then push it back from the roads where, during the wet season, when there isn’t much risk of fire erupting into an uncontrollable beast, they burn it. They rip out the roots of whatever lantana stalks are left, so at least those particular plants won’t grow back. Around 90 kilometers from the park entrance, on a patch of land far away from anywhere a tourist might go, officers use heavy machinery to dig out lantana and free up space for grass and animals. The machines are deemed too loud and unsightly for tiger and leopard-spotting zones, but they can clear close to two acres per day. That’s much faster than cutting and tugging out lantana by hand, but a study published in 2015 by Tarsh Thekaekara, a conservationist with the Shola Trust, a non-profit conservation organisation based in south India, found that nearly 90,000 acres of Bandipur were “either ‘dominated by lantana’ or ‘impenetrable,’” which amounts to 38% of the reserve. It also mentioned that “almost all interventions aimed at 'eradicating' the plant over the last 100 years have failed,” and said plucking lantana from “heavily infested areas” costs way too much to continue for long. Eliminating lantana has been a Bandipur practice for decades, but they’ve only started using heavy machinery in the last four-five years, according to Srinivasea. Ideally, he said officers would like to wipe out the weed from the experimental clearing ground, but for now the operation is just a test to see how much they can get rid of and how much will stay lantana-free. “It’s not possible by one day, one month, one year,” Srinivasea said. “It’s a process.” As the jeep rumbled on, evidence of their work was all around: clumps of severed lantana piled near the edge of a pond, blackened stalks Srinivasea said they’d burned just before dry season. The road rose on the way to the last stop of the day, and Bandipur’s woodland savanna spread out underneath. From that distance, the lantana covered the ground like a fuzzy sea, stretching everywhere toward distant mountains. Lantana and Fire A series of fires scorched around 15,000 acres of Bandipur in late February, raging for several days as hundreds of firefighters, forest personnel, and others wrested it under control, with the help of two helicopters that dumped 49,000 liters of water from above. These kind of blazes regularly burn through south India in part because of how much lantana now covers the landscape. Fire can light it up like kindling and use it to spread across the ground. Lantana also climbs trees, helping flames jump from the ground to the canopy where the fire can do more damage, according to Ankila Hiremath, a plant ecologist at the Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology and the Environment. South India’s connected woodland savannas are vast enough that even these huge fires don’t consume nearly enough terrain to threaten them as a whole. The landscape has also adapted to fire: The bark on trees is thicker than in other ecosystems, and small blazes clear shrubs, leaving room for grass to grow. Lantana, though, has crowded the grass’s space, and according to MD Madhusudan, a co-founder of the Nature Conservation Foundation, even fire-adapted woodland savannas aren’t “accustomed to” these blazes, because the landscape hasn’t adjusted to this thicket of “fuel.” The fires that are fueled by lantana can also remodel the woodland savannas into terrain ripe for more lantana. S Sandeep, a soil scientist with the Kerala Forest Research Institute, said lantana sprang into a new area of the Wayanad Wildlife Sanctuary after a fire in 2014. This likely had something to do with what happens to soil when everything around it burns, especially after the kind of south Indian fire that can heat the ground up to 800 degrees Celsius -- nearly twice the surface temperature on Mercury. Soil quality actually increases right after a fire because of all the ash that seeps into the ground, but it only takes a few months for it to harden into poorer version of its former self, a kind of soil that struggles to absorb water and is prone to erosion. “Once the soil gets degraded, only the most tolerant sort of plants will survive,” Sandeep said. Those tolerant plants include invasives such as lantana, which reproduces so fast that even if a native species’ seedlings survive the fire, they have little time to repopulate. Weeding out the problem Lantana is a flowering plant native to Central and South America that British colonisers thought made a pretty addition to their botanical gardens, and so they first planted it in erstwhile Calcutta in 1807. The shrub’s popularity brought it from botanical gardens into home gardens, and by at least 1829 it had already made its way down to the Nilgiris. Lantana seeds travelled in the mouths of birds and washed into the wild amid sheets of rain, finding a home in the region’s woodland savannas. As lantana began to spring up in the south, the British were figuring out how to use the woodland portion of those savannas to make money for their empire. Trees were only useful to them if they could be sold for timber, and so the colonisers treated fire as a menace, just as they did in the temperate forests of Europe. The British ignored the indigenous practice of controlled burning that natives used to clear brush, allowing shrubs and bushes to grow and twigs and leaves to pile high. Controlled burning may also have been able to limit the spread of lantana, and though even the British began to realise in the early 20th century that total fire suppression was a mistake, Indian foresters have been reluctant to swerve away from colonial-era ideas. Without small fires, the invasive weed has warped woodland savanna ecosystems across the south, making it difficult to figure out how much controlled burning is still a good idea. “You can’t burn it in the same way that you used to,” Thekaekara said. “We have to kind of start from scratch, bringing together indigenous and scientific knowledge.” Ripping lantana out of the ground probably won’t work either, according to Hiremath, unless it’s coupled with something more. “It will just come back,” she said. “There’s so much lantana in the larger landscape and it’s so easily dispersed.” Once a patch of lantana is sliced off and uprooted, she suggests seeding the ground with native plants. Foresters could also light controlled fires that can damage lantana seeds and ward off its creep. Bilal Habib, an animal ecologist at the Wildlife Institute of India, thinks an effort to eradicate lantana should have started 20 years ago. “We are at a very critical stage right now,” he said. “We know they are invasive species. They are going to spread and spread. They’ve already taken a toll on our habitats.” There’s a good chance lantana could come to dominate regions to the north, snaking its way through wooded parts of central India, aided by the warming and drying climate. A few of the former garden decorations have even made their way into the Himalayas, which appear to be warming up just in time to welcome them. Read also: Shrinking terrain and shifting habitats: How the Bandipur fires may be impacting tigers  Colin Daileda is a freelance journalist in Bengaluru who has written about climate change for Thomson Reuters, and on other subjects for The Atlantic, Roads and Kingdoms, Mashable, and others. 
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Electricity bill for Bengaluru households to increase by about 5% from June

Electricity
The hike of 33 paise per unit on average has also been announced for residents of Mysuru, Mangaluru, Hubbali and Gulbarga.
Bengaluru residents, your electricity bills will get more expensive from June onwards. This after the Karnataka Electricity Regulatory Commission (KERC) on Thursday announced a hike of 33 paise per unit for Bangalore Electricity Supply Company (BESCOM) customers. Officials said this would effectively mean that expenses towards electricity for households will increase by 4.9% on average for domestic users. BESCOM facilitates electricity supply in eight districts of Karnataka – Bengaluru Urban, Bengaluru Rural, Chikkaballapura, Kolar, Davanagere, Tumakuru, Chitradurga and Ramanagara. At present, customers who use 0-30 units pay Rs 3.5 per unit and those using 30-100 units pay Rs 4.95 per unit. The tariff for the next two slabs of 101-200 units and 201-300 units are Rs 6.5 and Rs 7.55 per unit respectively. Officials said the price hike was necessary to match the overall higher input costs of power production. The same hike of 33 paise per unit on average will also be applicable to residents of Mysuru, Mangaluru, Hubbali and Gulbarga. BESCOM had initially sought a hike of Rs 1.01 per unit but this was faced with a lot of public opposition. There was also outrage about the frequent power outages affecting the city. During public hearing meetings, BESCOM officials maintained that a hike was necessary to keep up with purchase and transmission costs. This hikes come after a similar hike in October 2018, which was incidentally the second hike in 2018 itself. That time the hike was 14 paise per unit for BESCOM customers. The increase in tariff last time was attributed to the rising price of coal. That time the KERC granted permission to five electricity supply companies to collect fuel adjustment charges (FAC) in their bills. Meanwhile, BESCOM has also sought restructuring of its pricing slabs to a more simplified structure. A decision on that is still awaited by the regulatory authority. 
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Merry-go-round over Hassan DC role continues: Akram Pasha now replaces Priyanka Mary

Bureaucracy
Priyanka Mary’s transfer as Hassan Deputy Commissioner comes two months after she took over from Akram Pasha.
Hassan Deputy Commissioner Priyanka Mary Francis was transferred out of the district and replaced by Akram Pasha, who was previously the Commissioner of Rural Development and Panchayat Raj Department. The transfer comes just three days after the Election Commission of India lifted the model code of conduct following the completion of the Lok Sabha Elections. The transfer will be completed once the counting of votes in the municipality elections are completed. Priyanka's transfer comes just two months after she took over as Hassan DC at the expense of Akram, who was transferred on the orders of the Election Commission. Priyanka, who was previously the DC of Udupi district has not been given a posting by the state government following her transfer. Akram is the latest DC to take charge of Hassan district, which is the home district of JD(S) leaders HD Deve Gowda, HD Revanna and Prajwal Revanna. In her short tenure as Hassan DC, Priyanka took up a complaint against Prajwal charging him of filing a false affidavit for the Lok Sabha Elections. The probe over the issue is still going on. She also dismissed three polling officials and ordered a probe against HD Revanna after he was accused of allowing proxy voting in Holenarasipura. A probe was also ordered to look into Rs. 1.2 lakh cash found in a police vehicle in Holenarasipura in the run-up to the elections. Public Works Minister H D Revanna is the JD(S) MLA from Holenarasipura Assembly constituency. Revanna has publicly made statements against Priyanka in the past two months. In the past year, five IAS officers have taken charge as DC of Hassan district including Priyanka, Akram, Rohini Sindhuri, and D Randeep. Rohini Sindhuri was locked in a prolonged battle with the state government over her transfer from in 2018 after she was transferred out in contravention of the notified rules of Department of Personnel and Training (DoPT). Eventually, she secured her reappointment after a five-month long legal battle.
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Karnataka MPs Sadananada Gowda, Pralhad Joshi and Suresh Angadi to become cabinet ministers

Lok Sabha 2019
Speaking to the media at around 12.30 pm, Sadananda Gowda said, "I have received a call from our national leader Amit Shah a while ago.
Leader of the NDA parliamentary party, Narendra Modi and his coterie of ministers are all set to be sworn in on Thursday at 7 pm. Sadananda Gowda, the BJP MP from Bengaluru North, Dharwad MP Pralhad Joshi and Belagavi MP Suresh Angadi have received confirmation of a ministerial berth in the Union cabinet.  While Sadananda Gowda served as Minister for Statistics and Programme Implementation in the previous Narendra Modi cabinet, both Joshi and Angadi are new entrants. Sadananda Gowda has also served as Minister for Railways and Law and Justice.  Speaking to the media at around 12.30 pm, Sadananda Gowda said, "I have received a call from our national leader Amit Shah a while ago. He told me that I will be inducted into the cabinet. He asked me to arrive at Narendra Modi's residence at 5 pm and to formally take oath with other MPs later at 7 pm. I am extremely happy to hear this news," Sadananda Gowda added.  The two-time MP from Bengaluru North said that he would focus on developing his constituency and the state in the next five years. "It is a matter of pride for me that I would be able to serve in Narendra Modi's cabinet. I have contributed to my constituency a lot in the last five years and everyone has seen that. From releasing funds for suburban train project to metro phase II. My job is to serve my country, state and constituency,' he said.  Sadananda Gowda, however, said he did not have any aspiration for a specific ministerial berth, while stating that "any ministerial post in Narendra Modi's cabinet is an extremely good one". "Bhupendar Yadav called me and told me that I will be inducted into the cabinet. This time, I knew that they would give me a post although I was not offered one last time. My job will be to ensue that all of PM Modi’s development schemes reach the people of Karnataka. I will bring up the issues related to sugar cultivation once I take oath as minister," Suresh Angadi said  
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