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Contractors still control garbage management

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The Hindu      11.06.2018  

Contractors still control garbage management

The strike threatened by garbage contractors on Monday is being cited as a reminder that the city’s solid waste management system system is still at their mercy.

The situation on ground is contrary to the claims made by the Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike. While announcing the implementation of direct payment to pourakarmikas in June 2017, the civic administration had promised to take over the entire gamut of solid waste management. But with no transport infrastructure of its own, the BBMP went back to contractors to rent out their vehicles.

The BBMP has defined pourakarmikas for direct payment as only “sweepers”, keeping out garbage collectors and transporters — around 8,000 of them — from this definition.

The civic body has a deal to pay the contractors for both vehicle rent and salaries for their drivers and helpers, essentially giving back to them the entire gamut of garbage collection and transportation. “This false division of workers is a conspiracy to help contractors. All those workers who deal with solid waste are pourakarmikas,” said Clifton D’Rozario of BBMP Guttige Pourakarmikara Sangha.

Bowing to the contractors’ demand, the BBMP has increased the rates being paid to them. Vehicle rent and salaries for two persons per vehicle is paid as a monthly package. “A tipper was being paid Rs. 1.5 lakh and an autorickshaw Rs. 48,000, which has now been increased to Rs. 2.5 lakh and Rs. 63,000 respectively,” a senior official said.

One of the major demands of contractors is immediate implementation of these new rates and payment of arrears from January 2018.

Sarfaraz Khan, BBMP Joint Commissioner, SWM, said the new rates would be implemented after the model code of conduct for the Assembly election is lifted in a week’s time.

‘A vicious circle’

The recent drive to install RFID chips to track trucks, through which the civic agency discovered that 100 non-existent trucks were being billed for years, has also hit a raw nerve. “The contractors do not want RFID chips in their trucks, GPS systems and geofencing of autorickshaws, which enables the civic body to track these vehicles and weed out bogus billing. Whenever the civic body comes up with reforms to check bogus or inflated billing, the contractors hit back with a strike. This is a vicious circle which can be thrown out only if there is political will. But many councillors and senior politicians are hand in glove with contractors,” said N.S. Ramakanth, member, SWM Expert Committee.

 

Garbage contractors threaten strike from today

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The Hindu         11.06.2018  

Garbage contractors threaten strike from today

They rent out vehicles to BBMP for waste collection

The solid waste management machinery in the city is likely to be hit as garbage contractors have threatened to go on an indefinite strike from Monday. The contractors rent out transport vehicles to the Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) for waste collection and disposal.

The strike call over a range of issues, which includes non-payment of bills for the past five months, coincides with the onset of the monsoon and the Ramzan, when the smooth functioning of the solid waste management system becomes all the more crucial.

The timing and duration of the strike has already raised fears of more black spots coming up on Bengaluru’s streets.

Balasubramanyam, a garbage contractor, said though the previous government had promised them that they would be paid as per revised rates in September 2017, the BBMP had not honoured the promise. “We will not resume work till our dues are paid,” he said.

The government is likely to hold a meeting with the contractors on Monday to resolve the issue. Deputy Chief Minister G. Parameshwara holds the Bengaluru Development portfolio.

 

100 Mumbai buildings declared dangerous in pre-monsoon survey

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The Times of India            03.06.2018  

100 Mumbai buildings declared dangerous in pre-monsoon survey

| Jun 3, 2018, 15:38 IST
A pre-monsoon survey has declared 7 Mumbai buildings as extremely dengerous.

 

A pre-monsoon survey has declared 7 Mumbai buildings as extremely dengerous.

 

MUMBAI: In its annual pre-monsoon survey, the Maharashtra Housing and Area Development Authority (Mhada) has declared seven buildings in the city as extremely dangerous.
These seven buildings which come under the repair board of Mhada are said to be more than 50 years old.

Prakash Mehta, state housing minister said that the Mhada officials have managed to vacate 286 families from these seven buildings. He also said that the officials have sent notices to the remaining 117 families to vacate.

Top Comment

Nothing new. This kind of survey is done every year in Mumbai but tenants living in such dangerous and dilapidated building don''t want to move for several reasons. BMC knows very well about this.Evans Sumitra


"Our survey has found that there are seven buildings in the most dangerous category. We are requesting the occupants to vacate the premises for their own safety," Mehta said.

There are 93 dilapidated buildings which fall under the jurisdiction of the BMC and the state housing minister said that these dilapidated buildings fall in C1 (dangerous) category of the municipal corporation and the BMC will be getting them vacated too.
 


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