Mumbai, Sept. 1 -- After a long weekend where streets of SoBo were flooded with supporters of the Maratha leader Manoj Jarange Patil, the state authorities are working overtime to make sure office-goers are not inconvenienced Monday onwards by the ongoing protest. The administration confesses that the central business district (CBD) at the Nariman Point, or Fort and the nearby areas, may remain clogged as the protest spills into the week. Joint commissioner of police (Law and Order) of Mumbai police, Satyanarayan said, "We have a strong bandobast (arrangement) in important locations. We will have diversions, and we are deploying more manpower." "Monday is the first day when offices are opening. There may not be a problem accessing Nariman Point and Mantralaya from Churchgate, but there will be obstacles to reaching the area from CSMT," said a police officer. The deputy commissioner of police (traffic) of south Mumbai, Prashant Pardeshi said, "We will have to make some changes in traffic patterns, but we will keep south Mumbai working." As civic workers are also occupied with the Ganapati visarjan, the BMC has hired a housekeeping firm as per instructions from commissioner Bhushan Gagrani. The firm's 500 workers along with the civic body's 800 sanitation workers have been tasked with cleaning up the streets of SoBo littered with disposable plates and even human faeces. The city police have also deployed a squad in and around the Mantralaya to make sure protesters do not enter the state headquarters. A western railway officer said that the protesters were not causing trouble at the Churchgate station. "They come to the station to visit the toilets, eat, charge their cell phones and rest," the official said. According to a Central Railway spokesperson services would run as long as their were no disruptions from the protesters. "We have 230 men of the Railway Protection Force (RPF) and the Government Railway Police (GRP), and 94 men from Maharashtra Security Force," the spokesperson said, but added that more help from the state authorities was essential. "Without state help, it is difficult to ensure smooth running of trains," the official said....