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Garbage bin issue raises a stink at BBMP council meet

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The Hindu         31.05.2018  

Garbage bin issue raises a stink at BBMP council meet

Protest:BJP members demanding an apology from BBMP’s Joint Commissioner (SWM and Health) Sarfaraz Khan, during the council meeting on Wednesday.Chitra V. RamaniChitra V. Ramani

Protest:BJP members demanding an apology from BBMP’s Joint Commissioner (SWM and Health) Sarfaraz Khan, during the council meeting on Wednesday.Chitra V. RamaniChitra V. Ramani  

Opposition members take officials to task for installing the bins

Opposition members raised a stink about garbage bins installed by the Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) at a 100 black spots across the city, at the council meeting on Wednesday.

The BBMP has installed these semi-automated, semi-buried bins for wet and dry waste on a pilot basis. The former Mayors B.S. Sathyanarayana and N. Shanthakumari took the officials of the Solid Waste Management Department to task and said all earlier attempts to make Bengaluru a “garbage bin-free city” had come to a nought, and claimed that the bins had now become black spots themselves.

Govindarajanagar councillor Umesh Shetty sought to know who permitted the installation of these bins at a cost of Rs. 53 crore. Alleging that the council was kept in the dark over the issue, he charged that officials were taking unilateral decisions, without following protocol. He sought to know the status of the bins installed across the city at Rs. 2 crore when G. Padmavathi was the Mayor.

Responding to the questions, BBMP’s Joint Commissioner (SWM and Health) Sarfaraz Khan said bins were mandatory as per Swachh Bharat guidelines and SWM Rules, 2016. “The bins were first proposed by the State government, following which a proposal was sent to the Standing Committee for Health. After approval from the committee and council, e-tenders were floated. We have installed 100 bins so far; the High Court of Karnataka has directed the BBMP to install 100 more in the city,” he said, and added that the civic body had yet to pay the German firm. “Funds have been earmarked under the Nagarottana Scheme. Each bin costs around Rs. 5.5 lakh, plus maintenance for five years,” he said.

Mayor R. Sampath Raj directed the Commissioner to instruct the Technical Vigilance Cell under the Commissioner to conduct an audit on the status and condition of the old bins installed across the city. The TVCC, he said, should submit its report within 15 days.

Bins are mandatory as per Swachh

Bharat guidelines and Solid Waste Management Rules, 2016.

Sarfaraz Khan,BBMPJoint Commissioner (SWM and Health)