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Public Health / Sanitation

Municipal Corporation of Gurgaon completes technical bids for sanitation contracts

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The Times of India                29.05.2013

Municipal Corporation of Gurgaon completes technical bids for sanitation contracts

GURGAON: After a delay of over a year, the Municipal Corporation of Gurgaon (MCG) conducted the technical bids to award a sanitation contract for Zone-IV on Monday. According to officials, all the four companies that have participated in the technical bid have met the criteria and will take part in the financial bid that is slated for later this week. This is the first time the contracts are being given ward-wise instead of zone-wise in the MCG.

Apart from Zone-IV, the contracts are also being awarded for 19 outer colonies whose contracts have expired long ago. For the past many months, the MCG has been sending its own staff from the sanitation department to pick up garbage and sweep the streets in these colonies.

"There were four companies that were shortlisted to participate in the technical bid and all the bids of all the four have been accepted as they matched the technical specifications that we have specified. We will hold the financial bids later this week and whichever company agrees to do the job for the lowest amount will get the contract," said a senior MCG official.

"The contract will be awarded for a period of one year and it will be given ward-wise. The reason for doing so is because since the zone area is too large, we have been finding it difficult to get private agencies that have the required manpower and machinery to clean the entire zone. There are six wards in this zone and the contract will be given to different agencies so that they have the adequate manpower and resources to perform the task in a better manner," the official said.

The MCG had awarded the contract for the remaining three zones in December last year to private agencies for a period of one year. However, the contract has been given for the entire zone to a single agency and complaints have been pouring in from residents regarding the lack of sanitation in their area. MCG officials said they might award the contract ward-wise in these three zones as and when the contract period expires.

 

District administration breaks banned polythene supply chain

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The Pioneer                29.05.2013

District administration breaks banned polythene supply chain

The district administration coupled with awareness generation for plastic free environment have, to some extent, succeeded in breaking the supply chain of polythene of less than 40 micron in thickness and measuring 18X12 inches in size.

Following a directive from the District administration, wholesalers of Ranchi have sold out there entire inventory, as they claim, and have vowed to stick to the directive in future as well.

“The time which was given to us was sufficient to push the product in the market and clear the stocks. As of now we are neither maintaining any inventory of polythene of less than 40 micron in thickness nor have we placed any order for the polythene of same specification,” said an employee of Chabra Plastics, the biggest supplier of polythene in Ranchi and adjoining areas.

Besides large suppliers, small sellers of polythene have also pushed their product in the market and instead filled their shelf with polythene of 40 micron and above thickness.

“After the meeting we had with the Ranchi Deputy Commissioner, all small polythene sellers called a meeting and each one of us vowed to support the District administration’s effort towards total elimination of polythene,” said Prabhat Sharma, a small seller of polythene in Ranchi.

While some sellers may have buckled under the administration’s pressure, a minority of the class have led by example by not selling polythene of the said specification even before the District administration issued the directive banning polythene.

“It’s been more than one year since I stopped selling polythene of less than 40 micron in thickness. Although the ban was called by District administration at that time they could not enforce it to the letter,” said Sanjay Chaudhary of Shyam Traders adding “i stuck to the ban as I realised the danger it causes to human lives.”

The supply may have dried but the demand for the polythene has not declined yet. Small shop-owners, another important player in the long supply chain, jump from one small supplier of polythene to another in search of polythene of less than 40 micron.

“Shopkeepers always demand such polythene. They anticipate that small sellers would have stocked the polythene if the wholesaler has sold out entire lot,” said Sharma adding, “it is the cost of the thicker polythene which is discouraging shop owners from buying it in place of thin polythene.” The cost of polythene measuring 40 micron and above in thickness is around three times the cost of thin polythene.

“It’s the difference in the cost incurred per kilo which has kept the demand alive,” said the employee of Chabra Plastics.

 

BWSSB sewage line clearing

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The Hindu              29.05.2013

BWSSB sewage line clearing

Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage Board (BWSSB) will take up sewage line clearing work on Thursday in Fraser Town, Machallibetta, Pillanna Garden, D.J. Halli areas of Central 3 sub-division and Kamakshipalya, Kamalanagar, West of Chord Road 1 and 2, Agrahara Dasarahalli areas of North West 2 sub-divisional jurisdictions. BWSSB has, in a release, said that people living in these areas can call the respective AEE numbers, AEE Central 3 (9845444053) and AEE North West 2 (9845444073) to lodge complaints.

 


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