02 July,2026 10:07 AM IST | Thane | mid-day online correspondent
Pic/Thane Municipal Corporation`s disaster management cell
A tree fell on a parked bus in Thane's Naupada area early on Thursday morning, damaging the vehicle but causing no injuries, according to the Thane Municipal Corporation's Disaster Management Cell.
The incident was reported to the civic authorities at 5:40 am on July 2. It took place near the Gurudwara, opposite Kopri Bridge, on the service road in Bhaskar Colony, Naupada, Thane (West).
Officials said the tree fell on a parked TATA Micropolo bus bearing registration number MH 03 CV 8985. The vehicle is owned by Bharat and Dhandas. No injuries or casualties were reported as the bus was unoccupied at the time of the incident.
Personnel from the Thane Municipal Corporation's Disaster Management Cell reached the spot with a pickup vehicle to carry out the necessary response and clearance operations. Fire Brigade personnel also responded to the incident and were deployed with one fire engine to assist in the operation.
Authorities are continuing the removal of the fallen tree and ensuring that the affected stretch is cleared for normal movement.
Meanwhile, the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) on Wednesday constituted a two-member committee to conduct a thorough probe into the incident, in which a tree collapsed on a school bus, killing a student, and suspended an assistant garden superintendent for alleged negligence.
BMC Commissioner Ashwini Bhide directed Deputy Municipal Commissioner (Special Engineering) Purushottam Malavade and Deputy Municipal Commissioner (Engineering) Shashank Bhore to conduct a detailed probe and submit a report within eight days.
The committee has also been asked to seek the opinion of experts and recommend measures to prevent recurrence of such incidents, the civic body said in a release.
On Tuesday, an 11-year-old student died and four others were injured when a peepal tree uprooted and collapsed on their moving school bus that was ferrying 13 students near Diamond Garden in suburban Chembur (West).
According to the BMC release, the uprooted peepal tree was estimated to be 60 to 70 years old and no official public complaint regarding its condition had been received earlier.
The tree had been surveyed on May 12 this year and was found to be healthy and structurally sound during external inspection. It was also pruned on May 29 as part of the annual pre-monsoon tree maintenance exercise, when it was found to be safe, it said.
In a related development, the BMC suspended an assistant garden superintendent pending a departmental inquiry for alleged negligence in connection with the fatal tree fall.
In an order issued by the office of the Deputy Municipal Commissioner (Gardens), the civic body said Jagdish Bhoir, assistant garden superintendent of M/West Ward in eastern suburbs of Mumbai, has been placed under suspension with immediate effect.
The BMC said at first glance, Bhoir appeared to have been negligent in connection with the incident and was therefore being suspended pending a preliminary departmental inquiry.
According to the civic body, it identified and removed 468 dead or dangerous trees and pruned branches of 1,00,318 trees across the city in 2026 as part of its pre-monsoon preparedness.
It said 687 trees had fallen across Mumbai in 2023, including 180 on BMC land and 507 on private properties. The number stood at 653 in 2024 and increased to 855 in 2025.
Following the Chembur incident, the commissioner has directed civic officials to undertake fresh pruning and time-bound reinspection of potentially hazardous trees and ensure necessary action to minimise the risk of similar accidents, the release said.