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Solid Waste Management

Waste segregation: Outer areas outperform core zones

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The Hindu           08.02.2017 

Waste segregation: Outer areas outperform core zones

A cadre of around 3,000 RWA members has been deployed to monitor implementation at various levels.— Photo: K. Murali KumarK_MURALI_KUMAR  

BBMP officials attributed the gap to the ‘good habits’ of citizens living on the outskirts

Almost a week after the Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) made yet another attempt to get residents to segregate their waste, those in the outer zones appear to be outperforming their counterparts in the core areas.

The segregation percentage in the outer zones, including Mahadevapura, Rajarajeshwari Nagar, Bommanahalli and areas such as Yelahanka, was between 60 and 65% until Sunday.

On the other hand, the figure in the core city zones was less than 35%, though some of them saw a slight improvement from the first day figures (east improved from 27% to 32%, the south and west from 17% to 25%).

BBMP officials attributed the gap to the ‘good habit of segregation’ that exists in the outer areas, among other things.

“People in the outer zones have been segregating waste much longer. There are pockets in the core zones that are segregating. But the core zones have a large number of slums where segregation is not happening,” said Sarfaraz Khan, Joint Commissioner, Solid Waste Management and Health, BBMP.

The other areas that are lagging behind are the markets and densely populated areas, including Avenue Road.

“On Avenue Road, for example, there are shops on the lower floor and houses on the upper floors of buildings. In such areas, accessibility is an issue,” he added.

With the palike announcing a penalty for households that do not segregate, BBMP Commissioner N. Manjunath Prasad said health officers are being prepared to execute the exercise.

Other measures are being taken to step up segregation. Among them is pressing 360 link workers into service at the rate of almost two per ward. “They will visit houses that are not segregating waste. We are checking the progress in each zone every day. Officers, including myself, visit various mustering points (there are 600 in the city) at 6.15 a.m. to educate pourakarmikas on segregation,” Mr. Khan added.

A cadre of around 3,000 residents welfare association (RWA) members has been deployed to monitor implementation at various levels — zonal, ward, Assembly constituency and block. “We will be issuing identity cards to them soon as many complained of resistance from violators as they did not have a formal designation,” he said.

 

Compost your waste, sell to the BBMP

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The Hindu        08.02.2017  

Compost your waste, sell to the BBMP

Civic officials are working on the modalities of this model, which aims to motivate citizens

If the thought of the ‘tediousness’ of segregating your own waste, let alone composting it, is keeping you from doing it, the Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) may offer a good reason to change your mind. The Palike is pitching for a model that involves citizens composting their waste and the civic agency buying it from them.

BBMP Commissioner N. Manjunath Prasad said the proposal, which will be placed before the council soon, will be an incentive for citizens to compost their own wet waste after segregation, thereby also reducing the quantum of waste being collected. "It is very simple. It involves an investment of Rs. 900 for which you get three buckets and coco peat, which does not cost a lot. The manure that comes out of the exercise is of very good quality," said the commissioner, who has been composting waste in his home.

Citizens can use the compost for their own gardens and sell the excess to the BBMP, which plans to set up collection centres on the lines of the Dry Waste Collection Centres, which are present in almost all wards.

Though a rate is yet to be fixed, the manure bought from citizens will be used for its 1,300 parks or will be taken to one of its waste plants from where the Agriculture Department is already picking up compost, he added.

BBMP Commissioner N. Manjunath Prasad has been composting waste in his home for some time

 

Waste segregation: Outer areas outperform core zones

Print PDF

The Hindu        07.02.2017   

Waste segregation: Outer areas outperform core zones

A cadre of around 3,000 RWA members has been deployed to monitor implementation at various levels.— Photo: K. Murali KumarK_MURALI_KUMAR  

BBMP officials attributed the gap to the ‘good habits’ of citizens living on the outskirts

Almost a week after the Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) made yet another attempt to get residents to segregate their waste, those in the outer zones appear to be outperforming their counterparts in the core areas.

The segregation percentage in the outer zones, including Mahadevapura, Rajarajeshwari Nagar, Bommanahalli and areas such as Yelahanka, was between 60 and 65% until Sunday.

On the other hand, the figure in the core city zones was less than 35%, though some of them saw a slight improvement from the first day figures (east improved from 27% to 32%, the south and west from 17% to 25%).

BBMP officials attributed the gap to the ‘good habit of segregation’ that exists in the outer areas, among other things.

“People in the outer zones have been segregating waste much longer. There are pockets in the core zones that are segregating. But the core zones have a large number of slums where segregation is not happening,” said Sarfaraz Khan, Joint Commissioner, Solid Waste Management and Health, BBMP.

The other areas that are lagging behind are the markets and densely populated areas, including Avenue Road.

“On Avenue Road, for example, there are shops on the lower floor and houses on the upper floors of buildings. In such areas, accessibility is an issue,” he added.

With the palike announcing a penalty for households that do not segregate, BBMP Commissioner N. Manjunath Prasad said health officers are being prepared to execute the exercise.

Other measures are being taken to step up segregation. Among them is pressing 360 link workers into service at the rate of almost two per ward. “They will visit houses that are not segregating waste. We are checking the progress in each zone every day. Officers, including myself, visit various mustering points (there are 600 in the city) at 6.15 a.m. to educate pourakarmikas on segregation,” Mr. Khan added.

A cadre of around 3,000 residents welfare association (RWA) members has been deployed to monitor implementation at various levels — zonal, ward, Assembly constituency and block. “We will be issuing identity cards to them soon as many complained of resistance from violators as they did not have a formal designation,” he said.

 


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