Delayed road widening turns stretch near Hubballi into death trap
The Hindu
Bid to widen the bypass to be opened on June 3
The death of eight persons in the accident on the Hubballi-Dharwad Bypass (NH4) has once again brought to light the delay in the widening of the around 30-km two-lane stretch which has almost become a “death trap”.
It was in January that the National Highways Authority of India (NHAI) floated the tender to convert the 31-km long two-lane bypass between Hubballi and Dhawad into a six-lane expressway and for two-lane service road on each side.
Subsequently, on February 28, Union Minister for Road Transport and Highways Nitin Gadkari laid the foundation stone for the work and heaped praises on Union Minister for Parliamentary Affairs Pralhad Joshi for finding a solution for the complicated road-widening project.
However, even as elected representatives keep visiting hospitals to console the grieving family members of the accident victims, the reality is that the bids are yet to be opened. On Tuesday evening, district in-charge Minister for Dharwad Halappa Achar, after a meeting with NHAI officials, told mediapersons that the bids would be opened on June 3.
As per the tender conditions, a time of two-and-a-half years has been fixed for completion of the project after the work orders are issued, which is yet to happen. However, if Mr. Achar is to be believed, the term is two years and efforts would be made to complete the work even before that. Considering the laidback attitude, it seems an improbability as of now.
Nandi Highway Developers Ltd. laid the 29.04-km bypass between Gabbur Cross in Hubballi and Narendra Cross in Dharwad in 1998 and maintains it. As per a rough estimate, 390 people have lost their life and 300 have become disabled in around 1,200 accidents on the stretch in the last 12 years.
The bypass is a bottleneck as two six-lane roads on either ends (Dharwad and Hubballi) are squeezed into a two-lane bypass. While roads on either side got widened but the bypass has remained as it is since 1998, making it dangerous for travellers. Demand for road widening through agitations went unheeded for years.