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Public Health / Sanitation

VMC will accord top priority to sanitation: Hari Kiran

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The Hindu        04.09.2014

VMC will accord top priority to sanitation: Hari Kiran

Vijayawada Municipal Commissioner C. Hari Kiran handing over wheelbarrows to sanitation workers in Vijayawada on Wednesday.- PHOTO: V. RAJU
Vijayawada Municipal Commissioner C. Hari Kiran handing over wheelbarrows to sanitation workers in Vijayawada on Wednesday.- PHOTO: V. RAJU

The Vijayawada Municipal Corporation (VMC) will accord top priority to sanitation in the city, said Commissioner C. Hari Kiran here on Wednesday.

“Sanitation is a basic service, and the corporation will leave no stone unturned in improving sanitation in the city,” Mr. Kiran said after distributing six tricycles and 10 wheelbarrows to workers at a function here.

The tricycles and wheelbarrows were donated by Anu Hospital chairman G. Ramesh as part of the corporate social responsibility initiative of the hospital. Mr. Kiran said improving sanitation was not only the responsibility of the municipal corporation but also corporate companies. “There are several companies which can help in taking measures to ensure better sanitation,” he added.

The corporation will soon release dues to residential associations that take up sanitation in their respective colonies by hiring workers.

“The dues have been pending for the last 18 months. We will release them in a week,” he said.

The VMC is also planning to send proposals to the government on setting up a sewage treatment plant. As many as 10 companies have approached the corporation and evinced interest in setting up the plant to generate electricity using wet and dry waste, the VMC chief said. The plant will require at least 18 acres of land.

Three places have been identified for establishing the new facility. “We are sending proposals to the government. It will take eight months for grounding the project after getting the government’s nod,” he said.

Speaking on the occasion, Anu Hospital chairman G. Ramesh said poor sanitation would result in the spread of communicable diseases and cautioned people to maintain proper sanitation.

 

Civic bodies to embark on cleanliness campaign from September 6

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The Hindu      01.09.2014 

Civic bodies to embark on cleanliness campaign from September 6

 Starting September 6, for a fortnight, the civic bodies will carry out a cleanliness campaign targeting the nooks and corners of the Capital.

Named ‘No Man’s Land and Back Lane Cleaning Fortnight’, the campaign will ensure that unoccupied plots and vacant areas around rail tracks and flyovers, often used to dump garbage, are kept clean.

Delhi BJP Chief Satish Upadhyay on Sunday said the drive would precede the ‘Sanitation and Heath Drive’ that would kick off on September 25 and special emphasis would be laid on sanitation at unauthorised and resettlement colonies.

Responsibilities of both municipal officials and leaders would be fixed and surprise checks would be conducted by leaders of the civic bodies, he added.

 

DUSIB plans toilets with improved technology for all slum dwellers

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The Hindu       01.09.2014  

DUSIB plans toilets with improved technology for all slum dwellers

The Delhi Urban Shelter Improvement Board (DUSIB) has formulated a ‘slum sanitation strategy’ for providing toilet facilities to slum dwellers across the city. The Board announced on Sunday that it planned to provide better sanitation facilities and upgrade the existing toilets in JJ clusters.

DUSIB chief executive officer Amar Nath said new toilets with improved technology would be made available and Rs. 42 crore would be spent for creating these facilities. DUSIB has been using bio-digester-based disposal systems in some of its new toilet blocks and mobile toilet vans, he said.

Presently, there are 685 JJ clusters, which are on land owned by various State and Central Government agencies, where DUSIB, civic bodies, and other government agencies have provided toilet facilities.

USIB has provided 307 toilet blocks and will take over all the toilet blocks which are presently with the civic bodies, Mr. Nath said.

“To improve sanitation in the slums , there is a need to devise an integrated slum sanitation strategy and an advisory committee on sanitation strategy in slums comprising NGOs and experts working in the field of sanitation has been constituted,” he said.

DUSIB has been using bio-digester-based disposal systems in some of its new toilet blocks and mobile toilet vans

 


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