Published 15:56 IST, June 17th 2020
COVID-19 contact tracing ramped up in Mumbai: BMC tells Bombay HC
BMC informed the Bombay High Court that it has ramped up COVID-19 contact tracing in the city to 1:10 ratio and plans to increase the same to 1:15 ratio in the coming days.
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The Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) informed the Bombay High Court that it has ramped up COVID-19 contact tracing in the city to 1:10 ratio and plans to increase the same to 1:15 ratio in the coming days.
In an affidavit filed in the court on Tuesday, the civic body said for every COVID-19 patient, it had identified at least 10 high and low-risk contacts and placed them in institutional or home quarantine.
On June 12 alone, it had screened more than 19,000 people who may have come in contact with infected persons, while over 78 lakh such people had been screened so far, the BMC stated in its affidavit.
"To contain or stop the spread of COVID-19, the Municipal Corporation of Greater Mumbai (MCGM) has been carrying out aggressive contact tracing. The current contact tracing ratio is 1:10 and the proposal is to increase this to 1:15 in densely populated areas," the affidavit filed by BMC's E ward assistant commissioner reads.
These submissions were made before a bench of Justice S J Kathawalla, who was hearing a petition filed by Neelkamal Realty, a DB Realty group company, challenging the requisition of its redevelopment building in Byculla by the civic body to use it as a quarantine facility.
Two other developers had also joined in the plea challenging the requisition of their buildings in Worli and Andheri (west).
The BMC informed the court on Tuesday that it had decided against using the buildings in Worli and Andheri, but Neelkamal Realty's building has to be used as a quarantine facility, considering the high number of COVID-19 cases in E ward, which includes Byculla.
Neelkamal Realty Tower, a redevelopment building meant to house 240-odd tenants, was yet to meet civic requirements for an occupation certificate, the BMC told HC.
And therefore, it had been converted into a 1,000-bed quarantine facility, where 940 people were currently recuperating, the civic body stated.
Moreover, the building's proximity to civic-run Kasturba and Nair Hospitals also made it suitable, the BMC counsels, senior advocates Aspi Chinoy, and Anil Sakhre told HC.
The civic body also told the court that it was willing to pay the developer a monthly rent of Rs 25 lakh that could be used for rent and repairs of transit facilities where the building's tenants were currently lodged.
On Tuesday, advocate Vivek Shukla, who represents 140 tenants of the building, said the tenants were not against the building being used as a quarantine facility, as the developer was yet to handover the flats to them.
Advocate Shukla added that the developer was "yet to pay them transit accommodation rent for the last four months." And as long as they were paid rent, the building could be used by the BMC, he said. The high court will continue hearing the matter on Friday.
(Photo Credit for representation: PTI)
15:56 IST, June 17th 2020