Karpal Singh Drive, Penang’s seaside jewel, faces a grim fate.
The Protect Karpal Singh Drive Action Committee (ProtectKarpal) launched on 16 March to halt a land reclamation project stretching from the Jelutong Landfill.
Their battle cry? Extend the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) feedback deadline from 22 March to 30 April.
This isn’t just red tape—it’s a lifeline for a community blindsided by a sneaky plan.
A measly six-week window—sparked by a hushed Facebook post on 12 February—leaves residents scrambling.
“The current feedback timeline is inadequate and excludes many affected residents.” A.D. Chandrasekaran, ProtectKarpal’s chair.
This project could clog roads, taint air, and trash the promenade’s vibe. From Jelutong’s schools to its temples, the fallout looms large.
Without a fair shout, authorities might steamroll locals for a mixed-development dream.
Why Karpal Singh Drive faces peril
Karpal Singh Drive dazzles with its art sculptures and sea breeze—think Nakayama’s blue pillars glinting at dusk.
Yet, the Jelutong Landfill scheme threatens to bury that magic under concrete. Picture this: 34 hectares of waste morphing into flats and shops.
Residents fret over gridlock and smog. The EIA’s meant to suss this out, but a rushed deadline gags their voice.
ProtectKarpal demands transparency. Six extra weeks let folks dissect the report, not just nod at it.
Chandrasekaran insists, “This isn’t a formality—it’s our future.”
A botched process risks turning a beloved strip into a developer’s playground.
Locals deserve to know if “Karpal Singh Drive’s charm” will survive—or fade into a memory.
How to Save Karpal Singh Drive today
ProtectKarpal’s rallying the troops—and they mean business.
They urge you to hit the EIA feedback link (https://shorturl.at/0YYBM) and join their WhatsApp posse (https://tinyurl.com/ProtectKarpal).
Next, ping your MP to back the 30 April extension. Chandrasekaran warns, “Silence now breeds chaos later.”
The committee’s also tapping the Jabatan Alam Sekitar and state bigwigs for a rethink. It’s a grassroots roar against a top-down shove.
Time’s tight—22 March looms. Yet, the fix is clear: stretch the clock. This isn’t just about stalling; it’s about power.
Residents can shape the “Karpal Singh Drive action” narrative if they act fast. The project’s scale—13.5 million tonnes of landfill reborn—demands a proper say.
Karpal Singh Drive teeters on the edge—treasure or trash heap? ProtectKarpal’s push for an EIA extension fights for clarity over haste.
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