The Times of India 31.07.2012
Garbage collection points turn dump yards
CHENNAI: The civic body’s
garbage collection centres are turning into mini dump yards of their own
and fast becoming a breeding ground for mosquitoes and flies.
But with the city reeling from an outbreak of diarrhoea and repeated complaints from residents of Sowcarpet, the Chennai Corporation
is dismantling the bright blue aluminium enclosures from several areas
and reverting to the old system of placing garbage bins in different
parts of a street. Though many enclosures are located on main roads in
all 15 zones, they border near residential apartments or houses leaving
residents fuming.
Residents of Trivelian Basin Street in
Sowcarpet are hoping that the civic body would soon remove the garbage
collection point from their area soon. Set up two months ago, the
enclosure located opposite a three-storied residential apartment is
overflowing with garbage. A few of the apartments have fixed mosquito
nets covering their windows. “We have no other option since the
enclosure was set up two months ago,” says Manish Ghosal, whose balcony is about 12-feet from the enclosure.
The collection centre is also next to a corporation primary health
centre which specializes in maternity care and ironically, about 50
metres from the civic body’s malaria hospital.
“In the last two months, mosquitoes and house flies have increased,” he says. Residents here say the corporation worker
does not bother to empty garbage from houses into the large bins and
dump it on the ground instead. The corporation lorries that come once a
week clear the bins and not the other garbage lying around in the
enclosure.
Residents say in the last one week a two-year-old
child had contracted diarrhoea. “A public toilet that used to exist near
the collection point has been shut as now many homeless people use this
place to defecate,” says Arihant Jain, another resident.