BMC Commissioner Ajoy Mehta, while announcing the budget estimates, said that the civic body has focused on some of the projects that were announced in last year's budget in order to give them a fresh impetus.
These projects include the Coastal Road, which has got an allocation of Rs 1,500 crore and the Goregaon-Mulund Link Road, for which a sum of Rs 100 crore has been earmarked.
He said that the BMC would opt for the Public-Private Partnership (PPP) model to open schools that have closed down for various reasons, adding that it had planned to restart 35 such schools, closed for want of students, by tapping into CSR funds and approaching educational trusts. These schools will be affiliated to CBSE, ICSE or other such educational boards, he informed.
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It has also proposed to install 381 sanitary napkin vending machines in 345 schools for girl students of Class VI to VIII.
The BMC's budget also proposed a Rs 5 crore plan to install 4,064 CCTV cameras in 381 municipal schools.
It has earmarked Rs 100 crore to reconstruct cycling and walking tracks parallel to the Tansa water pipeline.
Mehta said that the BMC would be getting a grant of Rs 8,401 crore by way of Good and Services Tax reimbursement from the Centre and the state government.
Later, talking to reporters, Mehta said that the civic body's prime objective was to push basic and infrastructure projects in the megacity, besides upgrading living standards of the people.
The budget has earmarked Rs 9,527.8 crore for capital expenditure in 2018-19, against the budgetary allocation of Rs 8,121.58 crore in the current fiscal.
He said, "Of this amount (Rs 8,121.58 crore), we have spent Rs 6,111 crore which is 56 percent, or Rs 3,416 crore, more than last year's expenditure of Rs 3,850 crore. This is part of our emphasis on infrastructure."
It also proposed to do away with pay and use toilets with the civic body planning to gradually take them back from contractors and operate them free of cost.
Explaining the reson behind this, Mehta said, "We were receiving frequent complaints from users regarding over charging. Plus they (operator) were not maintaning hygiene. This is why we decided to take back our toilets. We will build or convert them into posh toilets that will be handed over to people who can operate it free of cost.
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