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Public Health / Sanitation

Door-to-door garbage collection likely to stop in Pune

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The Times of India       12.09.2014

Door-to-door garbage collection likely to stop in Pune

 

PUNE: The Pune Municipal Corporation's (PMC) reluctance to renew its contract with SWaCH, the cooperative of waste-pickers, may result in the system of door-to-door garbage collection in the city coming to a halt.

The five-year agreement came to an end in September last. As per the contract, the PMC shouldered the responsibility of providing basic equipment like hand gloves, buckets, cotton scarfs, raincoats etc to waste-pickers besides contributing to welfare scheme of the members' children. The PMC had also promised to meet the administrative cost for collecting and segregating garbage from four lakh households in the city. All these benefits have stopped since the contract expired last year.

"For the last one year, we have been working without a contract and have been deprived of benefits offered by the PMC. We are running the show with the help of charges that we collect from people. The PMC has repeatedly assured us that the contract will be renewed, but nothing has happened so far," said Mangal Pagare, CEO of SWaCH. The PMC also needs to take a call on charges citizens will have to pay for the daily service.

Waste-pickers fear the system will collapse if the PMC continues to ignore the matter and delay a decision on renewal of the contract.

PMC's solid waste department head Suresh Jagtap said, "We are in the process of renewing the contract. We have already prepared a draft, which will be presented to elected representatives. Several rounds of meetings were held with SWaCH and the demands of waste-pickers have been taken care of."

SWaCH members want the PMC to clear the pending dues and ensure the terms and conditions of the contract are adhered to.

 

 

PMC to launch ‘mission sanitation’ today

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The Times of India       12.09.2014 

PMC to launch ‘mission sanitation’ today

 

Patna: State Urban Development and Housing Department (UDHD) has asked Patna Municipal Corporation (PMC) to get its tasks executed at the earliest. First in its list is 'mission sanitation', which the civic body will launch on Friday. The department will help in case of staff crunch.


At a meeting chaired by UDHD secretary Sandeep Poundrik a few days back, the department directed the PMC to take up 'mission sanitation' on urgent basis for the approaching festival season. Additional municipal commissioner (AMC) Shrisat Kapil Ashok told TOI a team of 60 to 70 sanitary workers in each circle would work under the supervision of their respective executive officers during the 'sanitation mission' from Friday.
Also, the PMC has ordered for over 360 handcarts to pick up garbage from streets. It has also sanctioned Rs3.55 lakh for the repair of old handcarts. A sum of Rs22 lakh has been sanctioned from the emergency fund for the purchase of brooms, limestone and bleaching powder. PMC commissioner Kuldip Narayan has also directed the chief sanitation officers to assure regular cleaning and sprinkling of limestone and bleaching powder.


The civic body will also ensure that all the puja committees during Durga Puja maintain cleanliness and keep dustbins in and around their respective pandals. It has also proposed to reward the cleanest pandal.
The AMC said additional 200 sanitation workers have been hired for Durga Puja and their number may be doubled for Diwali and Chhath. The mission will continue for two months from now, he said.


The UDHD has also directed the civic body to install 200 street lights in the NCC and 125 lights in Bankipore circle. At least 145 street lights have to be installed in the Kankarbagh circle and 150 in Patna City circle. The junior engineers under different power substations will help in installation work at the identified spots. This task has to be completed by September 24.


The PMC has also decided to repair the defunct high mast lights at the important spots of the city such as the area near Patna Junction, R-Block and Income Tax roundabout.

 

NMC to ask private hospitals to display rate cards

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The Times of India       12.09.2014 

NMC to ask private hospitals to display rate cards

 

NASHIK: The civic body health department will soon issue notices to private hospitals to display rate cards in the premises, following a Bombay high court order in July making it mandatory for medical institutes to display the information.

The deputy director of health recently sent a circular to the Nashik Municipal Corporation (NMC) asking them to implement the order of the court. This will make it mandatory for all medical establishments to display the schedule of charges payable for different treatments, surgeries and other services on the notice board like that in government hospitals. The rate card is expected to end billing disputes between patients and hospitals.

NMC medical superintendent B R Gaikwad said, "We have received the letter from the deputy director of health. We will send notices to all the private hospitals very soon."

The Indian Medical Association (IMA) that had taken objection to government decision remains firm on its stand. Rahul Aher, president of the Nashik branch of IMA, said that the central organization was following up the issue with the authorities concerned and is trying to get the proposal stalled.

"Displaying the rate card is not a good idea for the doctor or the patient. This will worsen the doctor-patient relationship. The bed charges and the doctor's fees are displayed by big hospitals and are also on the hospital records. The hospitals also give rate cards and when the patient goes to the hospital, the receptionist also asks about the category that they would like to opt for treatment," he said.

Aher added that hospitals do not charge patients as per every injection and all these are charged under drug cost. The surgical charges vary as per the complications, though the type of surgery may be the same.

"The operation theatre charges are proportional to the surgical charges. No doctor will keep the patient on operation table or on anesthesia for long hours. This rate card system like hotels is not good. This would increase the distrust between the patient and the doctors," he said.

A city doctor said that it was an unfair move and if the rates increase due to health complications during the treatment, the patient would feel cheated.

Some doctors, however, welcomed the move saying that it will bring in transparency in hospital administration. "The more the transparency, the better it is as the patient will at least know the approximate amount for various treatments," said medical practitioner Raviraj Khairnar.

Administrator of Apollo Hospitals Sudheer Rai said, "It is a good thing and the patient and relatives will know what they are spending and what each treatment costs. This is the right thing to do. Transparency is anytime good. We have a tariff booklet and plan to display the rate card in two languages."

Nashik centre head for Wockhardt Hospitals Avinash Agarwal said that their corporate office at Mumbai will take the decision regarding the issue and inform them about it.

On July 1, Justice V M Kanade and Justice P D Kendre while directing that the hospitals should display rates also stressed that the hospitals cannot hold back the bodies over non-payment of bills. The division bench had said that people probably vandalise hospitals since there was no control over private hospitals.

The bench was hearing two petitions against two well-known hospitals in Mumbai. The bench decided to treat one of the petitions as a public interest litigation to address the larger issues so that directions can be given, guidelines framed and mechanism evolved to help hospitals recover their dues. During the hearing, the government clarified that hospitals have no legal right to detain patients, though they can file suits to recover their money; even foreign courts. Currently, there is no mechanism to regulate hospitals over recovery of bills.

Justice Kanade also pointed out that in some cases the doctors do not even visit the patients and yet the fees are charged for the same. Noting that hospitals have not yet done so and based on the complaints with respect to it, the deputy director of health sent the notice to the NMC along with a sample of how the rates are to be displayed.

 


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