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Public Health / Sanitation

Garbage continues to pile up

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The Hindu 19.11.2009

Garbage continues to pile up

Staff Reporter

Municipalities are struggling to find a proper disposal site

— Photo: T. Singaravelou

Awaiting solution: Garbage being removed from 45 Feet Road to be taken to a new location in Puducherry, on Wednesday.

PUDUCHERRY: Garbage piles up in Puducherry as the municipalities are struggling to find a proper disposal site. With the failure of negotiations with residents of Sedarapet-Karasur to temporarily dump waste in the area, Puducherry’s garbage disposal problem continues to trouble residents and authorities alike for a week now.

Disposal facility at Kurumbapet

“We have made arrangements for garbage to be disposed at a location today. All the garbage from the two municipalities will be collected and cleared in a day or two,” said Public Health Minister A. Namassivayam on Wednesday. “When the modern garbage disposal facility at Kurumbapet gets ready in a few months, the problem will be solved,” he said.

According to a release, officials of the Oulgaret Municipality adopted a resolution to dump all the garbage collected within the municipal areas at the Karuvadikuppam dumping yard. The Public Health Minister has also been intimated about the resolution, the release said.

Collecting trucks and dustbins have remained laden with garbage after the residents of Karuvadikuppam protested against disposal of garbage in the area. Heaps of garbage along the roadside are now a common sight. But, in some pockets of the town, waste is being cleared off the roads.

The Puducherry and Oulgaret municipalities together generate about 500 tonnes of garbage a day, according to municipal officials.

Last Updated on Thursday, 19 November 2009 02:37
 

Delhi awaits Centre’s nod for cleaning Yamuna

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Indian Express 18.11.2009

Delhi awaits Centre’s nod for cleaning Yamuna

Yamuna dirt

‘EIL has conducted a study for the Yamuna channelisation project, under which three big canals with interceptors will be used so that sewage water does not flow into the river.’

The Delhi government is awaiting the Centre's nod for a proposal to built interceptor channels besides the Yamuna river to prevent flow of polluted water into it, Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit said on Wednesday.

Engineers India Ltd has conducted a study for the Yamuna channelisation project, under which three big canals with interceptors will be used so that sewage water does not flow into the river," she told a national seminar on 'Water Equipment and Management', organised by the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) in New Delhi.

"We are hoping for a quick decision from the Centre so that the project can be started by next year. Then we can make the Yamuna cleaner," the Chief Minister said.

She later told reporters that the government was awaiting the Centre's nod for the channelisation project. She also said, "We need efficacy in water management and we do not want to waste money like in YAP (Yamuna Action Plan)."

The Chief Minister also said steps will be taken to improve the water distribution system.

Addressing the seminar, she said the government has restored some 100 water bodies but there is need to do more.

Several water bodies has been encroached upon, she said. Justifying the proposed hike in water charges, she said the cost of water in Delhi is one of the lowest in the country.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 18 November 2009 11:14
 

Urban areas fare no better

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The New Indian Express 18.11.2009

Urban areas fare no better


BHUBANESWAR: Rural parts of Orissa, undoubtedly, have the highest deprivation. But, do urban areas fare better? The answer is an emphatic `no’ if the determinants are any indication.

Lack of adequate urban development can be ascertained by the fact that the average per capita water supply in such areas stands at only 130 litres/day, while national average is 150 litres/day and the UN norm is 200 litres/day. More than one-third of the 57 lakh urban population are still out of water circuit. A measly 3 per cent of the urban population has partly underground sewerage clearance facility. Not a single major city in the State has a functional integrated sewerage treatment facility.

The pattern of expenditure could not be blamed for the deprivation. For, the aggregate expenditure in 2007-08 on water supply, sanitation, urban development and housing stood at Rs 1,246 crore at 19 per cent of the aggregate annual expenditure. Capital expenditure stood at Rs 528 crore at 42 per cent of the total and expenditure on maintenance at Rs 680 crore. The Central grant-in-aid for urban development has also been on the rise primarily due to Central flagship schemes like JNURM and UIDSSMT.

A recent evaluation report by the Union Ministry of Urban Development points to impairment of urban administration ridden with corruption and rooted in inefficiency. The report that examined the key reforms under JNURM reveals that no city in Orissa has achieved the mandatory target of 90 per cent collection efficiency and among the 15 cities that have achieved 85 per cent coverage in Property Tax, Puri is the only one from Orissa.

None of the cities was able to collect 100 per cent of the operation and maintenance (O&M) costs incurred in providing services like water supply.

However, Bhubaneswar and Puri were the two cities from Orissa among the 29 cities that have migrated to Double Entry Accrual Based Accounting System and published their Balance Sheets after valuation of their assets and liabilities. But, none from Orissa figured in the list of 13 cities that have accomplished e-governance reforms. Similarly, none figured in the list of 45 cities that have internal earmarking of funds for services to urban poor in their annual budgets.

A significant disclosure is the State Government has neither passed the community participation law nor has incorporated the relevant provisions into the existing laws. JNURM takes public as an important stakeholder in the development process and non-conferral of the legal power of participation to them is simply letting the errant urban local bodies go off the hook for their various commissions and omissions.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 18 November 2009 10:57
 


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