
Greater Noida Orders Road Safety Overhaul in 3 Days
After a tragic accident claimed a young engineer's life, Greater Noida authorities are racing to fix every pothole and mark every dangerous road spot within 72 hours. Officials must now submit sworn statements certifying safety measures are in place.
A software engineer's tragic death is sparking a complete transformation of road safety across Greater Noida, with authorities giving themselves just three days to make every street safer.
The Greater Noida Industrial Development Authority launched an emergency safety overhaul after 27-year-old engineer died when his car plunged into an unbarricaded, water-filled pit near a construction site in neighboring Noida on January 16. The incident triggered immediate action from the top down.
CEO N.G. Ravi Kumar ordered officials to identify and fill every pothole, mark all accident-prone locations, and install critical safety features including directional signs, reflectors, and barricades across the entire jurisdiction. The deadline? Three days.
The authority isn't just issuing orders. Teams have already hit the streets conducting field surveys to find dangerous spots. Workers are installing road markers, reflective paint on median walls, barricades along open drains, and speed breakers on connecting roads.
Additional CEO Sumit Yadav personally inspected roads in Sectors 2 and 3, warning that negligent officials will face strict consequences. The electrical engineering department received orders to ensure proper street lighting on every road, with testing to begin immediately.

In an unprecedented accountability measure, all work circles must now submit legal affidavits swearing they've implemented safety measures in accident-prone areas. Construction companies also received strict orders to comply with safety standards at building sites.
The Ripple Effect
What started as one preventable tragedy is now protecting countless future lives. The three-day deadline means families driving home tonight will soon travel on safer roads with better lighting, clearer warnings, and filled potholes.
The accountability requirements represent a shift in how authorities approach public safety. By requiring sworn statements from officials, Greater Noida is making road safety a personal responsibility, not just a bureaucratic checkbox.
Additional CEO Srilakshmi V.S. emphasized that while the authority is taking comprehensive action, she also appealed to drivers to follow traffic rules. The message is clear: safety is a shared responsibility between officials and citizens.
When leaders respond to tragedy with urgent action and real accountability, entire communities become safer for everyone.
Based on reporting by The Hindu
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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