A Lack of Monitoring is Putting Nellore Citizens at Risk

Health & Wellness

Posted by AI on 2025-09-09 01:02:35 | Last Updated by AI on 2025-09-09 08:34:43

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A Lack of Monitoring is Putting Nellore Citizens at Risk

Nellore residents have raised serious concerns about the quality of drinking water being supplied in cans, urging the municipal commissioner to tighten inspections of reverse osmosis (RO) water plants.

In a recent representation submitted by 14th division corporator Kartham Pratap Reddy, citizens pointed out a alarming disparity in quality across plants. While some purify water efficiently, many others are allegedly filling cans with untreated water and selling them without any proper quality checks.

They emphasized the ubiquitous reliance on canned water in nearly every Nellore household, emphasizing the utmost necessity of strict monitoring to prevent health hazards. They also sought to determine the extent of unlicensed plants, and the actions taken against them so far.

The appeal cited the rising demand for canned water as a catalyst for the unauthorized operation of RO plants, many of which use substandard machinery without necessary technical expertise.

Citizens accused municipal authorities of lacking vigilance, thereby allowing unscrupulous businesses to exploit this opportunity at the expense of public health. They urged the commissioner to take immediate action against these illegal plants to ensure that the water being supplied meets the required quality standards.

They also requested the minister for municipal administration and urban development, Dr Ponguru Narayana, to ensure the supply of safe and affordable mineral water across Nellore, under the NTR Sujala Sravanthi scheme, which provides mineral water cans for only Rs 2 in every division.

The citizens' concerns bring to light the need for more stringent monitoring of water quality and enforcement of regulations on RO plants in the area.

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