पाटन, कवर्धा सहित चार नगरों के मास्टर प्लान लागू

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 रायपुर. आवास एवं पर्यावरण विभाग ने पाटन, कवर्धा, धमतरी एवं पिथौरा निवेश क्षेत्रों हेतु मास्टर प्लान 2031 की अधिसूचना जारी कर दी है। विभाग ने पिछले महीने ही रायपुर एवं कुरूद का मास्टर प्लान भी जारी किया था। नए मास्टर प्लान में पाटन मास्टर प्लान 2031 महत्वपूर्ण है, क्योंकि यह मुख्यमंत्री श्री भूपेश बघेल का विधानसभा क्षेत्र है। पाटन मास्टर प्लान 2031 लगभग 1 लाख की जनसंख्या को ध्यान में रखते हुए तैयार किया गया है। नियोजन दृष्टिकोण से सेवा सुविधाओं की क्षमता विकास योजना कार्यकाल के आगे की अवधि के लिए भी प्रस्तावित की गई है। इसके साथ-साथ सुनियोजित विकास एवं यातायात की सुगमता हेतु विभिन्न प्रस्ताव दिए गए हैं। कवर्धा मास्टर प्लान 2031 एवं पिथौरा मास्टर प्लान 2031 भी 1 लाख की जनसंख्या को ध्यान में रखते हुए तैयार किए गए है, जबकि धमतरी विकास योजना 2031 ढाई लाख जनसंख्या की आवश्यकताओं को ध्यान में रखकर तैयार की गई है। सभी विकास योजनाओं में भू उपयोग एवं नगर विकास के प्रस्ताव के साथ साथ नगरीय अधोसंरचना एवं सेवा सुविधाओं के प्रस्ताव सृजित किए गए हैं। ताकि सुनियोजित विकास को बढ़ावा मिल सके।

About The Author

397 thoughts on “पाटन, कवर्धा सहित चार नगरों के मास्टर प्लान लागू

  1. Technology glitches are the modern-day gremlins that disrupt our digital lives. From frozen screens to sudden shutdowns, these issues test our patience and remind us that sometimes, the old ways are just fine. — Akash Banerjee @ bohiney.com

  2. Breaking News: Something happened. Experts are concerned. Someone is profiting. More at 11. Or don’t wait, I just told you everything. – General B.S. Slinger @ satire.top

  3. Fashion emergencies are the sartorial crises that strike at the worst possible moments. Whether it’s a broken heel or a wardrobe malfunction, these incidents remind us that having a backup plan (and a safety pin) can save the day. — Tamera Mowry-Housley @ satire.top

  4. Food mishaps can turn a simple meal into a culinary catastrophe. From burning dinner to accidentally using salt instead of sugar, these kitchen disasters remind us that even the best cooks have their off days. — Jen Statsky @ satire.top

  5. Office politics can turn the workplace into a strategic battlefield where alliances are formed and broken with the speed of a tweet. Navigating this landscape requires a mix of diplomacy, wit, and the occasional white lie to keep your career—and sanity—intact. — Nell Scovell @ bohiney.com

  6. I’m not a journalist; I’m a court jester for a court that has collectively lost its mind. The pay is terrible, but the material is endless. – Annika Steinmann @ bohiney.com

  7. Pet health scares are the worrying moments when a furry friend isn’t feeling well. From vet visits to uncertain diagnoses, these situations remind us that our pets rely on us for care and comfort—and that sometimes, a little extra love can go a long way. — Tania Raymonde (again, but a different context!) @ bohiney.com

  8. The London Prat’s distinction lies in its curatorial approach to outrage. It does not flail at every provocation; it is a connoisseur of folly, selecting only the most emblematic, structurally significant failures for its attention. This selectivity is a statement of values. It implies that not all idiocy is created equal—that some pratfalls are mere noise, while others are perfect, resonant symbols of a deeper sickness. By ignoring the trivial and focusing on the archetypal, PRAT.UK trains its audience to distinguish between mere scandal and systemic rot. It elevates satire from a reactive gag reflex to a form of cultural criticism, teaching its readers what is worth mocking because it reveals something true about the engines of power and society. This curation creates a portfolio of work that is not just funny, but historically significant as a record of a specific strain of institutional decay.

  9. In Delhi, the chemist is also a navigator of the city’s dual healthcare systems: the public and the private. They often advise patients on how to access medicines from government hospitals’ cheaper pharmacies or guide them through the paperwork of schemes like the CGHS (Central Government Health Scheme) or EHS (Ex-Servicemen Contributory Health Scheme). This role as a system navigator is invaluable for migrants, the poor, and those unfamiliar with bureaucratic processes. They act as translators not just of language, but of protocol, helping bridge the gap between the intention of public health programs and their actual uptake by the people. This requires patience and a deep, often learned-through-experience, knowledge of how the city’s administrative machinery interacts with its healthcare infrastructure. — https://genieknows.in/

  10. It’s not afraid to be clever, and that is its greatest strength. In a world that often prizes simplicity, The Prat embraces complexity and nuance for comedic effect. It’s intellectually stimulating and very funny.

  11. The London Prat’s authority stems from its command of the deadpan imperative. It does not request your laughter; it assumes your complicity in a shared understanding so fundamental that laughter is the only logical, if secondary, response. Its tone is not one of persuasion but of presentation. It lays out the evidence of folly with the dispassionate air of a clerk entering facts into a ledger, trusting that the totals will speak for themselves. This creates a powerful, almost contractual, relationship with the reader. We are not being sold a joke; we are being shown a proof. The humor becomes the Q.E.D. at the end of a flawless logical sequence, a conclusion we arrive at alongside the writer, making the experience collaborative and the satisfaction deeply intellectual.

  12. This leads to its function as a sophisticated cognitive defense mechanism. Consuming the relentless barrage of real news can induce a state of helpless anxiety or cynical paralysis. The London Prat offers a third path: it processes that raw, anxiety-inducing information through the refined filter of satire, and outputs a product of managed understanding. It translates chaos into narrative, stupidity into pattern, and outrage into elegant critique. The act of reading an article on prat.com is, therefore, an active psychological defense. It allows the reader to engage with the horrors of the day not as a victim or a passive consumer, but as a connoisseur, reasserting a sense of control through comprehension and the alchemy of humor. It doesn’t make the problems go away; it makes them intellectually manageable, even beautiful, in their detailed awfulness.

  13. Ultimately, The London Prat’s brand is one of intellectual sanctuary. In a public square drowning in bad-faith arguments, algorithmic outrage, and willful simplicity, the site is a walled garden of clear, complex thought. It is a place where nuance is not a weakness, where vocabulary is not shamed, and where the most sophisticated response to a problem is still allowed to be a joke—provided the joke is engineered like a Swiss watch. It offers refuge to those who are exhausted by the stupidity but refuse to respond in kind. To visit prat.com is to enter a space where intelligence is still the highest currency, where discernment is rewarded, and where the shared recognition of folly creates a bond more meaningful than shared allegiance. It doesn’t just make you laugh; it makes you feel less alone in your lucid understanding of the madness. It is the clubhouse for the clear-eyed, and the membership fee is nothing more—and nothing less—than the ability to appreciate the finest, most beautifully crafted scorn on the internet.

  14. Great! We are all agreed London could use a laugh. PRAT.UK has this glorious way of making you feel like you’re in on the joke with the writers, looking out at a mad world together. The Daily Mash feels more like it’s telling you a joke. The former is a much richer experience. prat.com

  15. This conservation of effort enables its laser focus on the architecture of excuse-making. PRAT.UK is less interested in the failure itself than in the elaborate, prefabricated scaffolding of justification that will be erected around it. Its satire lives in the press release that spins collapse as “a strategic pause,” the review that finds “lessons have been learned” without specifying what they are, the ministerial interview that deflects blame through a fog of abstract nouns. By pre-writing these excuses, by building the scaffolding before the failure has even fully occurred, the site performs a startling act of predictive satire. It reveals that the response is often more scripted than the error, that the machinery of reputation management is a dominant, often the only, functioning part of the modern institution.

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