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Civic body ban on plastic carries hopes for underprivileged women

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Indian Express 21.01.2010

Civic body ban on plastic carries hopes for underprivileged women

Paper bags City organisation targets to sell 50,000 a month as public gets alternative packing option

The Pune Municipal Corporation decision to ban plastic bags has given an earning option for 200 underprivileged women — they are getting more orders for paper bags. The initiative by United Children’s Welfare Organisation (UCWO), which has trained 200 women and set a sales target of 50,000 bags a month, comes at a time when citizens are left stranded by the sheer absence of any packing option in grocery stores, vegetable kiosks and retail marts, for long dependent on the plastic option.

“It can give livelihood to hundreds of underprivileged women. The bags are made out of newspapers collected from housing societies and we teach them how to make paper bags. These women work from home and we also help them sell these bags,” said United Children Welfare Organisation president Meher Irani.

The organisation is planning to train 3,000 women in the coming months and to provide them a steady income. “If the ban on plastic bags stays, around 50,000 paper bags will be in need each day. This could fetch lakhs of rupees to these women. Also, those women who are trained can pass on the skill to others who wish to learn.”

He said the organisation would initially support self-help groups with raw material such as old newspapers, gum and other equipment needed to make bags, besides financial assistance. “There are two options for selling these bags. We will buy them from these SHGs in large quantities and will give them the profit or they can sell it on their own.”

The ban decision has led to a standoff between the civic body and the plastic manufacturers. The Association for Promotion of Plastics has urged the civic body to take into consideration the Union and state government regulations on the ban.

The strict implementation of the ban has led traders to oppose the move. All the while, the public is faced with the sheer absence of an alternative option.

To address this issue, the NGO is planning to sell these bags to commercial establishments in and around Pune — at the same time generate revenue to support the education of the underprivileged children, which is its thrust area. “We are aiming around 50,000 bags each month from these groups for the first few months, after which the numbers could increase depending on the efficiency and business they generate.”

The civic body general body had on December 23 passed a resolution banning plastic bags in its jurisdiction. The civic administration had started strictly implementing the ban across the city and fining those selling plastic bags.

Last Updated on Thursday, 21 January 2010 11:13
 

Soon, BMC markets to go ‘plastic-free’

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Indian Express 20.01.2010

Soon, BMC markets to go ‘plastic-free’

The Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) has decided to make its markets ‘plastic-free’ in a bid to encourage ban on plastic bags. The civic body wants buyers in its 92 markets across the city to turn to paper and cloth bags.

The BMC will employ women from local self help groups to manufacture paper and cloth bags that will be available for sale at the municipal markets. Additional Municipal Commissioner Manisha Mhaiskar said that they expect citizens to purchase these bags and slowly stop using plastic bags. Individual vendors in these markets will stop giving plastic bags thinner than 50 microns.

“When a person buys a cloth bag, he will have a tendency to reuse it and stop asking for plastic bags all together. We are looking at this campaign as a habit-inducing exercise,” said Mhaiskar. The campaign will kickstart on January 26 in two municipal markets, Mhaiskar added.

The decision comes in the wake of the recent proposal of the mayor to completely ban the use of plastic bags in the city. At present, there is a ban on plastic bags thinner than 50 microns according to the Maharahstra Non-biodegradable Garbage Control Act, as they clog drains and are not environmentally sustainable. The mayor had, however, pulled up the administration for its inability to implement the ban and had asked for a blanket ban on all plastic bags.

The administration had stated that the proposal to completely ban plastic will have to be studied and be implemented in phases. It had promised to implement the current ban and crack down on users of plastic bags thinner than 50 microns.

“The transition from plastic to no plastic will be a slow one and we will first need to make alternatives available to citizens. Therefore, we will exercise the ban in our municipal markets on pilot basis,” said Mhaiskar.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 20 January 2010 12:00
 

Noise monitors all over city by Sept

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Indian Express 18.01.2010

Noise monitors all over city by Sept

By September, Mumbai, along with six other cities, is scheduled to get a noise monitoring network. The Centre will install 10 stations across the city and record decibel levels on a regular and systematic basis. This is part of the latest amendments to the Noise Pollution (regulation and control) Rules, 2000, which the Ministry of Environment and Forest released on January 11.

A roadmap has been prepared for the proposed National Ambient Noise Monitoring Network and the stations would be set up on a pilot basis in Mumbai, Delhi, Kolkata, Chennai, Bangalore, Hyderabad and Lucknow in seven months. The project is aimed at more effective noise control.

Mahesh Pathak, member secretary of the Maharashtra Pollution Control Board, said, “Mumbai has already proposed noise monitoring stations at four spots, Mulund, Bandra, Vashi and Airoli, and is still waiting for the protocol to be finalised. Along with NGO Awaaz we are already monitoring noise during festivals; equipment and facilities are in place.”

Sumaira Abdualali of NGO Awaaz, said, “In 2003, we started monitoring noise during festival times along with help from the pollution control board. The monitoring stations will ensure a more detailed understanding of noise levels.”

The MoEF has proposed that once the noise monitoring networks become functional, it can later be extended to 18 more cities, with five stations each, in 2011.

Last Updated on Monday, 18 January 2010 11:24
 


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