Updated On: 25 July, 2023 07:40 AM IST | Mumbai | Prajakta Kasale
Civic chief had claimed last November that Mumbai would be pothole-free in two years; in two spells of rain, the roads proved him wrong

These dangerous craters are near Hazari Baug building at Station Road, Vikhroli West. Pic/Sameer Markande
The second spell of heavy rain that started last week has washed away all the tall claims the BMC has been making about Mumbai’s roads becoming pothole-free in two years. Many of the city and suburbs’ roads are riddled with craters that appear regularly year after year, angering citizens. Though most of the arterial roads have been converted into cement concrete ones now and they are in better shape, patches of asphalt on these roads have also created potholes that hinder the speed of vehicles.
The civic chief had claimed last November that the city would be pothole free within the next two years. But commuters are already facing the same fate this monsoon. The BMC has awarded a contract worth Rs 6,080 crore to concrete 400 km of roads this February. “But none of the roads were completed before the monsoon,” alleged Aaditya Thackeray, Shiv Sena (UBT)leader.