Sign in

Roads lasting 20 years will be a reality in Uttar Pradesh: Maurya

Deputy chief minister and public works department minister Keshav Prasad Maurya has announced setting up of an expert committee to markedly improve road connectivity and driving experience in Uttar Pradesh.

Published on: Dec 11, 2017, 14:43:43 IST
Hindustan Times, Lucknow | By , Lucknow
Share
Share via
  • facebook
  • twitter
  • linkedin
  • whatsapp
Copy link
  • copy link

Deputy chief minister and public works department minister Keshav Prasad Maurya has announced setting up of an expert committee to markedly improve road connectivity and driving experience in Uttar Pradesh. The announcement has been made two days after union road transport minister Nitin Gadkari said the quality of road construction undertaken by his ministry through the National Highways Authority of India in Uttar Pradesh will last three generations.

The committee set up by Maurya will suggest ways to improve road construction quality in a state with poor quality of roads even in urban areas. (HT Photo)
The committee set up by Maurya will suggest ways to improve road construction quality in a state with poor quality of roads even in urban areas. (HT Photo)

The committee set up by Maurya will suggest ways to improve road construction quality in a state with poor quality of roads even in urban areas.

The BJP government, in fact, missed its first test of making all the 1, 21, 034 kilometre roads ‘gaddha mukt’ or pothole free by June 15, underlining the mammoth task that awaits Maurya and his department.

However, Maurya, who got road experts from across the country for a two-day first of its kind conference on introduction of new road relay and repair technology, said he is in touch with experts who have promised 20-year road life against the usual under five year lifetime of bitumen roads that also require frequent repair. The conference concluded on Saturday.

The public works department (PWD) maintains the biggest chunk of 23 lakh square kilometre roads in the state. It’s on these roads that the PWD minister’s ‘kayakalp’ (transformation) claim would be tested. Maurya is also deputy chief minister.

The peeling of surface dressing on usual bitumen roads soon after they are relaid has been a common sight across the state but the PWD officials pointed out that the newer technology that involves a judicious mix of bitumen and cement along with few other chemicals has shown remarkable results.

“In fact, on select stretches, we have started relaying roads using the cement treated base technology with a recycler imported from Germany. Encouraging results have made us confident. That’s why we say it’s no joke that 20 year roads will be a reality in the state,” Maurya told HT.

The PWD officials pointed out that the ‘recycler’ is already being used on the Lucknow-Hardoi stretch managed by the state highways. “We have introduced third party inspection of all construction work being carried out by the department. There are encouraging results in stretches, where we have carried out road relay and full depth reclamation work using the latest technology,” he said.

Part of Maurya’s confidence is due to a BJP government at the centre and proactive road transport minister in Gadkari, something that the Samajwadi Party and Bahujan Samaj Party governments that ruled the state in the last 15 years didn’t have.

In fact, during the BSP rule between 2007 and 2012, the PWD department had put up notice boards on national highway roads, stating that the centre (and not the BSP government) needed to be blamed for the poor quality of those roads.

“We were directed to put up boards that also stated that if the centre wasn’t able to maintain those roads it should transfer the roads to the state which would maintain it. The Congress led UPA government was in power at the centre then. The state and the centre mostly played the blame game on road construction. This isn’t the situation now as the BJP has governments both in UP and the centre and naturally the focus on roads would be real this time,” a senior official told HT.

Maurya said by December 31 his department will have completed work on roads for which tenders have been finalised.

“I plan to meet contractors separately to make the government’s priorities clear. I am not against profit, but I am surely against roads that used to be re-laid and repaired on paper as was the case during the previous SP and BSP regimes,” he said.

“Why talk of just Rs 2 lakh crore? if required we would be able to get Rs 4 lakh crore as well because roads are integral to our commitment on development that we have made to the people of the state,” Maurya said.

Maurya has also asked the PWD officials to work out a plan for relaying and repair of roads leading to Allahabad that will host the Kumbh mela in early 2019.

“The Kumbh is going to be an event that we plan to showcase in a grand way. That’s why we will complete the work by 2018 end itself,” the deputy chief minister said.

  • Manish Chandra Pandey
    ABOUT THE AUTHOR
    Manish Chandra Pandey

    Manish Chandra Pandey is a Lucknow-based Senior Assistant Editor with Hindustan Times’ political bureau in Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh. Along with political reporting, he loves to write offbeat/human interest stories that people connect with. Manish also covers departments. He feels he has a lot to learn not just from veterans, but also from newcomers who make him realise that there is so much to unlearn.Read More