The Hindu 16.06.2017
Corporation in the dock for poor waste management
With no let-up in dengue cases reported from the city, the
Thiruvananthapuram Corporation continues to find itself in the dock over
a delayed start to pre-monsoon sanitation and clean-up activities to
control the mosquito population.
The civic body’s much-touted
waste management at source is at the heart of the debate, with critics
alleging that it has not yielded the desired results.
Says
Karamana councillor Ajith, “From pipe-composting to kitchen bins to
aerobic bins, nothing has worked effectively. Crores of rupees have been
spent on these projects. A Vigilance investigation should be ordered to
find out what has happened to this money.”
The
Thumboormuzhi-model aerobic bins are functioning properly in only a few
locations, such as Jagathy and Erumakuzhy. In Karamana, the councillor
has asked the Mayor to remove the bins in the absence of proper upkeep
and waste being dumped all around the spot.
Despite the
Corporation’s claims of clean-up activities being apace, drains and
channels by roadsides continue to be dumped with waste, some of it in
plastic covers. Piles of waste lie accumulated in bylanes. Roadsides are
dotted with plants and thickets, construction material, debris, old
furniture, abandoned vehicles, and waste from roadside shacks, providing
a breeding ground for vectors.
“Waste,
including slaughter waste, is dumped in open spaces. For instance, on
either side of the Kalady-Attukal road,” says autorickshaw driver
Satheesh Kumar, a resident of Kalady. “On the Killipalam Bund road,
local people keep watch to prevent people from throwing waste there.
They have even installed CCTV cameras there,” he says.
Says Chala
councillor SKP Ramesh, “Waste from a number of wards, including Chala,
is collected by an agency and sent to Tamil Nadu. What the city
Corporation was supposed to do is being done by someone else. There are
mounds of waste still on the Corporation’s land at Erumakuzhy.”
The
Corporation has asked wards to find landfills to dump the waste cleared
by it, but this too has drawn flak. Says Sheeba Patrick, Valiathura
councillor, “If we had that much land, we would have shifted families
affected by the raging sea there long ago.”
The Corporation claims
to have cleared 130 loads of waste, but only two or three trucks are
functional, the rest have broken down, Mr. Ramesh says. Mayor V.K.
Prasanth says things are not as bad as they are made out to be. “We are
not doing too badly considering there is no centralised waste treatment
plant. We have managed to remove nearly 30 dump sites. That is an
achievement. With the implementation of green protocol and the plastic
ban, the daily waste generated in the city has come down from 450 tonnes
to 200 tonnes,” he says. The Mayor says the next Council meeting will
decide on intensifying waste management activities.
Mr. Prasanth
says talks are also on with the Suchitwa Mission on a mechanism for
collection and disposal of sanitary napkins by considering it as
biomedical waste.