Mumbai legislator flags concerns over towering SRA buildings, demands improved first- and last-mile connectivity for Metro Rail | Mumbai News

Mumbai legislator flags concerns over towering SRA buildings, demands improved first- and last-mile connectivity for Metro Rail
Shiv Sena (UBT) MLC Sunil Shinde called for a comprehensive road master plan, instead of focusing primarily on Metro rail expansion

Mumbai: Raising concerns over housing and infrastructure planning in the city, Shiv Sena (UBT) MLC Sunil Shinde on Wednesday urged Maharashtra government to reconsider allowing extremely tall Slum Rehabilitation Authority (SRA) buildings, arguing that they may not serve the interests of rehabilitated residents.Speaking during a discussion on housing and infrastructure in the state legislative council, Shinde said several SRA projects along Dr Annie Besant Road in Worli have received approvals for towers as high as 50 to 60 storeys. He questioned whether authorities had considered the mindset and lifestyle of slum residents, many of whom are not accustomed to living at such heights.He pointed out that residents in several existing 42-storey SRA buildings already face frequent lift-related problems. “The government should consider restricting the height of SRA buildings. Otherwise, are we encouraging residents to rent out or sell their homes?” he asked, adding that while developers earn substantial profits from such projects, the government must prioritise the welfare of beneficiaries.Shinde also called for a comprehensive road master plan, instead of focusing primarily on Metro expansion. He said poor first-mile connectivity often discourages commuters from using Metro services. Citing an example, he said travelling from Worli to Vidhan Bhavan takes around 20 minutes by road, while reaching a Metro station itself can take up to 45 minutes.The MLC also criticised the poor response to recent Mhada housing lotteries, saying applicants often back out after prices are announced because the flats are perceived as unaffordable. He urged authorities to address pricing concerns to make housing schemes more attractive.

BMC suspends assistant garden superintendent after tree fall kills 11-year-old boy | Mumbai News

BMC suspends assistant garden superintendent after tree fall kills 11-year-old boy
Following the tragic death of 11-year-old Vihaan Srivastav in a tree crash, the BMC has suspended Assistant Garden Superintendent Jagdish Bhoir

MUMBAI: A day after 11 year old Vihaan Srivastav’s death in a tree crash incident in Chembur, BMC suspended Jagdish Bhoir- assistant garden superintendent of M west ward holding him prima facie responsible for negligence pending a departmental inquiry.In a statement issued on Wednesday, the civic body said officials against whom prima facie negligence had been established were suspended. It added that strict action would also be taken against the contractor responsible for the road works in the area.Bhoir’s suspension order issued by the office of the Deputy municipal Commissioner (gardens) states that the June 30 incident at around 2.58 pm on 11th Road in Chembur (East), a roadside peepal tree fell on a passing Universal School bus killing a 11 year old. “In connection with the said incident, prima facie/substantial negligence is evident. In view of this matter, you are being suspended from today, July 1, 2026, pending preliminary/departmental inquiry.Additional Municipal Commissioner Avinash Dhakane said issuing notices alone does not absolve officials of responsibility. “Merely issuing notices cannot be an excuse for such negligence. The matter should have been escalated to higher authorities. I have also directed the Roads Department to initiate action against the road contractor,” he said.Further, Municipal Commissioner Ashwini Bhide constituted a two-member committee comprising Deputy Municipal Commissioner (Special Engineering) Purushottam Malavde and Deputy Municipal Commissioner (Engineering) Shashank Bhore to investigate the incident. The panel has been directed to submit its report within eight days, consult experts and recommend measures to prevent similar incidents in future.Anguish over the child’s death spilled into the BMC’s Standing Committee meeting on Wednesday too, with corporators across party lines demanding accountability, an independent inquiry into the incident and systemic reforms in Mumbai’s tree management. Members across party lines demanded that a culpable homicide case be registered against officials found responsible for the incident.Congress corporator Tulip Miranda alleged that residents often do not receive timely responses from the Garden Department even after applying for permission to prune or remove hazardous trees, leading to preventable risks.Committee chairperson Prabhakar Shinde demanded that no official or contractor responsible for lapses should escape accountability. He called for the suspension of concerned officers pending the outcome of the probe and insisted that the inquiry should not be conducted solely by the same department involved in the incident.”There should be an independent, third-party inquiry. Responsibility must be fixed, whether it lies with officers or contractors,” Shinde said.BJP party leader Ganesh Khankar said the death of another child in a tree-fall incident, after a similar tragedy in Khar where a girl lost her life, could not be dismissed as an isolated accident.A total of 13 children were trapped inside the school van. Twelve were rescued immediately by personnel from the Mumbai Fire Brigade, the bus conductor and local residents, and were shifted by ambulance to nearby hospitals. Of the injured students, four sustained minor injuries, while 11-year-old Vihaan Srivastav died.

MIDC used unapproved technique, causing soil beneath Turbhe tracks to cave in: Railway probe | Mumbai News

MIDC used unapproved technique, causing soil beneath Turbhe tracks to cave in: Railway probe
Officials said nearly 60% of the underground pipeline project has been completed. (Representative image)

MUMBAI: A Central Railway inquiry into the June 24 ground cave-in between Turbhe and Kopar Khairane stations on the Trans Harbour line has found that the soil beneath the tracks gave way after the Maharashtra Industrial Development Corporation (MIDC) used a construction method different from the one approved by the Railways for laying an underground pipeline.According to the probe, MIDC had been permitted to carry out the work using the micro-tunnelling method, which minimises disturbance to the ground beneath railway tracks. However, the agency allegedly adopted the pipe-pushing method instead, weakening the soil supporting the tracks and resulting in the cave-in.The incident disrupted suburban train services on the busy Trans Harbour corridor for nearly two-and-a-half hours as railway authorities suspended operations on the affected stretch to carry out emergency restoration work and ensure passenger safety.Railway officials said the permission had required the work to be completed within a year and in accordance with prescribed safety conditions. Following the inquiry, Central Railway has initiated penalty proceedings against MIDC for violating the approved conditions of the work.Officials said nearly 60% of the underground pipeline project has been completed. MIDC has been granted an additional three months to finish the remaining work, with completion expected by January 2026.The Railways has also decided to tighten monitoring of infrastructure works near operational tracks to ensure approved construction methods are followed and to reduce the risk of similar incidents affecting train operations in future.

Pedestrian dies after balcony of Mhada cessed building collapses at Walkeshwar | Mumbai News

Pedestrian dies after balcony of Mhada cessed building collapses at Walkeshwar

Mumbai: A 51-year-old pedestrian working at a nearby petrol pump died after a portion of the third-floor balcony of a ground-plus-three-storey Mhada cessed building collapsed at Walkeshwar late on Tuesday.The incident, which was reported to the Mumbai fire brigade at 11.22 pm, took place at Surya Prakash Building on Babulnath Road in the Gaondevi area. According to onlookers, part of the third-floor balcony of the Mhada building gave way and crashed onto the road below.The victim, identified as Santosh Bharaskar, 51, was a pedestrian who worked at a nearby petrol pump. He sustained severe injuries in the collapse and was rushed to Sir J J Hospital, where doctors declared him brought dead.Teams from the fire brigade, police, BEST, the 108 ambulance service and ward staff rushed to the spot after the collapse. The exact cause of the incident is yet to be ascertained.Police and civic authorities are investigating the incident.

Crypto assets brought under depositors’ protection law; firms must deposit 50% liability before appeal | Mumbai News

Crypto assets brought under depositors' protection law; firms must deposit 50% liability before appeal
Cryptocurrency, other virtual digital asset-based investment frauds can now be pursued under the MPID Act.

MUMBAI: In a move aimed at tightening the legal framework against financial frauds and speeding up recovery for duped investors, the Maharashtra legislature on Wednesday passed amendments to the Maharashtra Protection of Interest of Depositors (in Financial Establishments) Act, 1999 (MPID Act), bringing virtual digital assets (VDAs) such as cryptocurrencies and other blockchain-based digital instruments within the ambit of the law.The Bill, introduced by Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis, also seeks to curb delays in MPID cases by capping adjournments before designated courts and making it mandatory for financial establishments to deposit 50% of their total liability before their appeals against recovery orders can be entertained.The government said the amendments were necessitated by the growing use of cryptocurrencies, digital coins and other blockchain-based assets in financial frauds, unauthorised deposit schemes and investor scams. Since such assets were not covered under the existing definition of “deposit”, the law was unable to effectively deal with several emerging frauds involving virtual digital assets.Under the amendment, the definition of “deposit” in the Act has been expanded to include any Virtual Digital Asset, with the term carrying the same meaning as assigned under Section 2(111) of the Income-tax Act, 2025.To ensure quicker disposal of cases, the Bill provides that designated courts hearing MPID matters can grant no more than two adjournments. A third adjournment will be allowed only in exceptional circumstances after the court records written reasons, a provision modelled on the Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita, 2023.The amendments also seek to discourage financial establishments from filing appeals merely to delay repayment to investors. Under the revised law, no appeal against an order of a designated court will be entertained unless the financial establishment deposits 50% of its aggregate liability with the Competent Authority.According to the Statement of Objects and Reasons accompanying the Bill, the changes are intended to strengthen protection for depositors, plug legal gaps exploited in digital asset-based frauds and ensure faster recovery of investors’ money by reducing procedural delays.What the amendments mean for depositors

  • Cryptocurrency and other virtual digital asset-based investment frauds can now be pursued under the MPID Act.
  • Recovery proceedings are expected to move faster with strict limits on adjournments.
  • Financial establishments will find it harder to delay repayments through prolonged appeals, as they must first deposit half of their total liability before challenging recovery orders.
  • The government said the amendments are aimed at modernising the nearly three-decade-old law to address evolving forms of financial fraud while strengthening safeguards for depositors across Maharashtra.

Frustrated by parents’ frequent fights, youth attempts suicide from Mumbai building; saved by neighbours | Mumbai News

Frustrated by parents' frequent fights, youth attempts suicide from Mumbai building; saved by neighbours
The incident took place at the Janakalyan Building in Dahisar East where the youth’s aunt stays.

MUMBAI: An 18-year-old boy attempted to end his life by jumping off the balcony of a building in Dahisar East on Wednesday, but was saved due to the quick thinking of neighbours. The incident took place at the Janakalyan Building in Dahisar East where the youth’s aunt stays. Police said the youth was frustrated over regular fights between his parents. He was also upset over being reprimanded for being unemployed. On Wednesday, he visited his aunt’s place and at one point, he climbed onto the balcony and tried to jump off. Alert neighbours who noticed the situation immediately intervened and managed to pull him back to safety, preventing a tragedy. Police said the youth lives in Malad.

‘Falling of trees is natural’: Maharashtra minister Sanjay Shirsat’s remark over Mumbai school bus tragedy sparks row | Mumbai News

‘Falling of trees is natural’: Maharashtra minister Sanjay Shirsat's remark over Mumbai school bus tragedy sparks row
After a devastating tree collapse in Maharashtra took the life of an 11-year-old boy, minister Shirsat remarks incited fury among the public

MUMBAI: Maharashtra’s Shiv Sena Sanjay Shirsat has stirred a controversy with his remarks on the death of an 11-year-old boy in a tree collapse incident in Mumbai, saying that the falling of trees is natural and beyond human control.His comments drew sharp criticism from the opposition, which accused the government of failing to prepare the city for the monsoon.The controversy follows Tuesday’s incident in which a large peepal tree crashed onto a school bus, killing an 11-year-old student and injuring four other children.Reacting to the incident, Shirsat had said, “How was one to know that the tree was going to fall? Falling of trees is natural. Maybe there were heavy winds.”The remarks drew criticism from Congress leader Nana Patole, who said they reflected “the level of arrogance” within the government.“The monsoon preparedness was only on paper, there was nothing on the ground,” Patole said.Amid the backlash, Shirsat on Wednesday clarified that his remarks had been misconstrued.“This was a very unfortunate incident. I had said that even though falling of trees is natural, civic authorities should take due precautions. Trees which are about to collapse should be removed before the onset of monsoon,” the minister told reporters.(With PTI inputs)

‘Vihaan will never play cricket again’: Mother’s grief after Chembur tree collapse kills 11-year-old | Mumbai News

'Vihaan will never play cricket again': Mother’s grief after Chembur tree collapse kills 11-year-old
A young boy’s life was tragically cut short when a falling tree crushed the autorickshaw he was traveling in.

MUMBAI:A cricket bat clutched tightly in a grieving mother’s hands has become the most poignant symbol of a young life cut short.Heartbreaking visuals emerged on Wednesday of Juhi Srivastav, mother of 11-year-old Vihaan Srivastav, who died after a tree crashed onto the school van he was traveling in on Chembur’s Road No. 11 on Tuesday afternoon.In the video, an inconsolable Juhi sits in silence, holding her son’s cricket bat close as relatives and neighbours gather around to console her. Overwhelmed by grief, she remains almost motionless, her silence conveying a loss too profound for words.Vihaan, the couple’s only child, was a passionate cricket lover who spent every evening playing with friends in the housing society where the family lived. His sudden death has left the close-knit community in deep shock.The Srivastavs, who live at Kukreja Residency in Chembur, remembered Vihaan as a cheerful, affectionate boy whose absence will be deeply felt.“All the children here share a close bond. They play cricket together every evening. I have no words to describe Juhi’s pain. When I met her, she told me, ‘Bhabhi, tell Harshu that Vihaan will never play cricket with him again.’ Hearing those words broke my heart,” said Samruddhi Kate, a Shiv Sena corporator and resident of the society.She added, “His father, Gaurav, is completely shattered and feels helpless. Nothing anyone says can lessen their grief. We can only pray that the family finds the strength to endure this unimaginable loss.”What should have been an ordinary journey home from school ended in an unimaginable tragedy, leaving behind a cricket bat, a devastated family and a neighbourhood mourning a child whose dreams were cut short in an instant.

Can Mumbai save trees and lives? How technology can predict the next tree fall | Mumbai News

Can Mumbai save trees and lives? How technology can predict the next tree fall
A tragic tree collapse in Mumbai, claiming an 11-year-old’s life, highlights a critical flaw in urban tree management.

The death of 11-year-old Vihaan Srivastava after a 70-year-old peepul tree collapsed onto his school van in Mumbai’s Chembur is more than another monsoon tragedy. Coming within a day of a separate incident in Uttar Pradesh‘s Firozabad district, where five people died after a tree crashed onto an e-rickshaw during a dust storm, it raises an uncomfortable question: can cities identify dangerous trees before they become killers?Every monsoon, civic agencies brace for flooded roads, waterlogging and potholes. Tree falls are treated as an inevitable consequence of heavy rain and strong winds. Yet the Chembur incident suggests that weather may have been only one part of the story. Civic officials have indicated that while the tree had undergone routine pre-monsoon pruning, its roots may have been damaged during road concreting carried out earlier this year. Residents living near the site have voiced similar concerns.

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If the inquiry confirms that construction activity weakened the tree, it will expose a larger problem confronting Indian cities: trees are valued as environmental assets but are rarely managed as living infrastructure requiring scientific monitoring throughout their lifespan.An ageing green assetMumbai has one of the country’s largest urban tree populations. Many of its rain trees, peepul, banyan and gulmohar trees were planted decades ago. They provide shade, reduce temperatures, absorb carbon, support biodiversity and soften the impact of dense urbanisation. But like bridges, buildings and flyovers, trees age. Their structural strength changes over time. Roots decay, trunks develop cavities, branches become unstable and construction around them alters the soil that supports them.

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Despite this, very few Indian cities maintain detailed health records of mature trees. Annual pruning before the monsoon remains the principal preventive exercise. While pruning removes weak branches, it cannot detect internal decay, root damage or fungal infection hidden beneath the surface.Civic officials are expected to conduct regular visual inspections, but these are often infrequent or inconsistent—a pattern seen across many Indian cities.A tree may appear perfectly healthy on the outside even as its root system has been severely weakened. Equally, an old, weathered-looking tree may still be structurally stable. Judging risk by appearance alone can therefore be misleading.

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When development becomes the problemAs cities expand, trees are increasingly competing with infrastructure for space. Road widening, footpath reconstruction, utility trenching and underground cable projects often disturb root systems. Concreting close to tree trunks reduces the soil’s ability to absorb water and limits root growth, while excavation can cut through the large anchor roots that keep trees stable during heavy rain and strong winds.The Chembur tragedy has brought this issue into sharp focus. Civic officials have said the garden department had raised concerns about protecting the peepul tree’s roots during road concreting carried out earlier this year. Whether those concerns were adequately addressed will be established by the inquiry, but the incident underscores a larger problem: poor coordination between civic departments can unintentionally weaken trees long before they become a public safety hazard.One of the biggest challenges is that root damage is rarely visible. A tree can continue to produce a dense canopy and appear perfectly healthy for months, or even years, after its underground support system has been compromised. It is often only when heavy rain loosens the soil or strong winds exert additional pressure that these hidden weaknesses become apparent—sometimes with devastating consequences.Technology is changing tree managementSeveral cities around the world are replacing reactive tree management with data-driven monitoring. The starting point is a digital tree inventory—a database in which every roadside tree is assigned a unique identification number and mapped using GPS. Along with its location, civic or state authorities record details like the tree’s species, age, height, trunk diameter, maintenance history and previous complaints. State or city civic bodies can continuously monitor the trees’ condition and prioritise inspections, instead of waiting for a tree to fall before taking action. The Geographic Information Systems (GIS) is the next layer, which combine tree data with information on roads, schools, hospitals, power lines and ongoing infrastructure projects. GIS allows authorities to identify trees located in high-footfall or high-risk areas and inspect them more frequently.Artificial intelligence (AI) is also beginning to transform urban tree management. AI can flag trees that may be more vulnerable during storms by analysing a tree’s age and species, soil conditions, rainfall, wind patterns, disease history and past tree-fall incidents. No technology can indeed predict the exact moment a tree will collapse, these AI tools can significantly narrow down the list of trees that require immediate attention, enabling civic agencies to intervene before a tragedy occurs.Technology is also making it easier to detect problems that are invisible to the naked eye. Engineers are enabled by ground-penetrating radar to assess the condition of a tree’s root system beneath city roads and pavements without excavation. These steps will help identify damaged roots or underground voids that could compromise stability.There are other diagnostic tools available that can reveal what lies inside the tree itself. Sonic tomography and resistograph drills are used to detect hidden decay and cavities within trunks. Soil moisture sensors track water conditions around vulnerable trees. Tilt sensors can also provide early warning if a tree starts to lean beyond safe limits following prolonged rain or strong winds. Drones fitted with high-resolution cameras and thermal imaging are predominantly being used to inspect tree canopies, especially in areas that are difficult to access or after severe weather conditions. These technologies are not meant to replace trained professionals. They enable experts to identify high-risk trees more quickly and direct inspections and maintenance where they are needed most.A shift from reaction to preventionIndian cities generally respond to tree falls rather than preventing them. Emergency teams remove debris, restore traffic and prune nearby branches. The cycle repeats every monsoon.The incidents in Mumbai and other cities demonstrate why prevention deserves equal attention. Tree safety should become part of annual disaster preparedness, much like flood management or building inspections. High-risk locations—including school routes, bus stops, hospitals, railway stations and densely populated residential areas—should receive priority.Trees cannot simply be classified as “old equals dangerous”. Many centuries-old trees remain healthy, while younger trees weakened by disease or construction may pose greater risks. Scientific assessment, rather than age alone, should determine intervention.A national policy is overdueIndia lacks uniform standards for assessing urban tree risk. Municipal practices vary widely, with different inspection methods, pruning schedules and documentation systems. A national tree safety framework could bring consistency while preserving urban green cover. Such a framework could include mandatory pre-monsoon health audits of mature roadside trees, standard protocols for pruning based on species and structural condition, and strict guidelines protecting roots during road construction and utility work.Every city should maintain a digital tree registry recording inspections, maintenance history and risk classification. Trees could be categorised as low, medium or high risk, allowing municipal resources to be directed where they are needed most.Public participation should also be strengthened. A mobile application allowing citizens to report leaning trees, exposed roots or cracked trunks would expand the number of eyes monitoring urban greenery. Reports could be integrated into municipal control rooms for rapid inspection.Emergency response protocols should also be standardised. Fire services, disaster management teams, electricity utilities and municipal departments need clearly defined responsibilities when trees fall during severe weather.Protecting trees without compromising safetyTree conservation and public safety are often portrayed as competing priorities. They need not be. Indiscriminate felling after every accident would weaken cities already struggling with rising temperatures and shrinking green cover. Mature trees deliver ecological benefits that young saplings cannot replicate for decades.At the same time, preserving every tree regardless of condition is equally irresponsible. The objective should be scientific management. Healthy trees should be protected. Trees showing manageable defects should receive treatment, pruning or structural support. Only those posing unacceptable risks after professional assessment should be removed and replaced. This balanced approach has become standard practice in several global cities where urban forests are treated as critical public infrastructure rather than ornamental landscaping.The lesson from ChemburThe inquiry into the Chembur tragedy will determine whether construction activity, extreme weather, hidden decay or multiple factors contributed to the collapse. But irrespective of its findings, the broader lesson is clear.Climate change is increasing the frequency of intense rainfall, strong winds and extreme weather events. As these events become more common, ageing urban trees will face greater stress. Cities can no longer rely solely on visual inspections and seasonal pruning to manage that risk.The technology to identify vulnerable trees already exists. The challenge lies in adopting it at scale, integrating it into civic planning and ensuring that departments responsible for roads, utilities and gardens work together rather than in isolation.The choice facing Mumbai—and many other Indian cities—is not between saving trees and saving lives. With scientific management, digital monitoring and better planning, it is possible to do both. The cost of such a system would almost certainly be lower than the human and social cost of another tragedy like the one that unfolded on a narrow lane in Chembur.

Ignored warnings? BMC notice flagged tree roots damage on Chembur’s 11th road months before fatal crash of Tuesday | Mumbai News

Ignored warnings? BMC notice flagged tree roots damage on Chembur’s 11th road months before fatal crash of Tuesday
Tree falls on school bus during rain in Mumbai, kills 11-year-old

MUMBAI: The death of 11-year-old Vihaan Srivastav on Tuesday afternoon occurred after a peepal tree crashed along Road No. 11 in Chembur—the very stretch where BMC departments had repeatedly warned each other months earlier that road works were damaging tree roots and increasing the risk of trees collapsing during the monsoon.Official internal communications accessed by TOI showed that the BMC’s garden department had issued at least two written warnings to the roads department, cautioning that excavation around tree bases during road and storm-water drain works was damaging roots and could lead to trees toppling during the monsoons.The first communication, dated January 27, 2026, followed an inspection by the Junior Tree Officer on January 24. It recorded that contractors carrying out road works on Road No. 11 and Road No. 14 in Chembur (East) had excavated close to tree trunks, damaging their roots.“The possibility of the said trees falling during the monsoon due to digging near the roots cannot be ruled out,” the notice stated, while also mentioning that residents had already complained and that the negligence of the contractor was tarnishing the civic body’s image.The garden department directed the roads department to immediately stop excavation near tree roots, remove construction debris piled around the base of trees, create tree basins measuring at least 1 metre by 1 metre, and fill them with red soil to facilitate healthy root growth.However, a second and more strongly worded notice issued a few months later indicates that the concerns had not been addressed. The subsequent notice expanded the affected stretches to include Road No. 11, Road No. 21, Sindhi Society Internal Road and Collector Colony Internal Road, stating that inspections continued to find tree roots being damaged during road works.The notice went a step further, warning that if any of the trees were to fall, the department executing the road work would be held fully responsible. It also mentioned that large quantities of construction debris had been dumped around tree bases, further harming the trees.Calling the matter “very serious”, the garden department also stated that it had repeatedly raised the issue but similar violations continued.It reminded officials that damaging trees in this manner is a punishable offence under the Maharashtra (Urban Areas) Protection and Preservation of Trees Act, 1975, and once again instructed engineers to prevent excavation near roots and restore proper soil around every affected tree.Tuesday’s tragedy has now raised questions over whether those repeated internal warnings were acted upon, and whether timely corrective measures could have prevented the fatal tree collapse that claimed the life of the 11 year old student returning home from school.