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Public Health / Sanitation

127 toilets in city, with Bill Gates Foundation’s help

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The Pioneer                 27.04.2013

127 toilets in city, with Bill Gates Foundation’s help

The Bhubaneswar Municipal Corporation (BMC) has decided to construct 127 public toilets across the city at a cost of Rs 12crore. The toilets would with the help the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

This proposal was approved at a BMC Council meeting recently and has been sent to State Government for final acceptance.

Out of the proposed 127 toilets, initially 27 would be constructed in three phases with 11, 10 and six in each phase, respectively, at an estimated cost of Rs 4.77crore, said a senior BMC officer.

In the first phase, 11 toilets would be constructed at Badagarh, Samantarapur, Gopabandhu Square, Garage Square, court area, Natala, Baragarh Kalyan Mandap, City Women’s College, Mahavir Square, Dumduma Square and Srijua Square.

In the second phase, 10 toilets are to be set up at Sailashree Vihar, Market Building, Hanspal Square, Pahal, Sriya Square, IG Park, the slum area near the Science Park, NABARD Colony Square, Infosys and NABARD Square. In third phase, six toilets would be set up at Palaspali, Lingaraj railway station, Jayadev Vihar Square, Ramadevi College and two at the Janata Maidan.

All the existing 38 public toilets and 25 community toilets in the city are in very poor conditions due to inadequate maintenance.

 

10% of N Delhi water samples found unfit for consumption

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The Pioneer               27.04.2013

10% of N Delhi water samples found unfit for consumption

Almost 10 per cent of drinking water samples collected from areas under North Delhi Municipal Corporation have failed to meet prescribed standards. As compared to the South Corporation, where just 1.2 per cent samples failed to meet the requisite criteria, its counterpart in the North fared much worse in the testing done by the civic body in coordination with the Delhi Jal Board.

According to the testing done by the corporation’s own laboratory, 37 out of 420 samples from NMC areas were found to be unfit for consumption. Narela and Civil Line zones were the worst-affected with 20 out of 70 and seven out of 17 samples failing the tests. When it came to results of the South Corporation area, only three of the 242 samples failed the laboratory inspection. As far the 151 samples tested jointly by the civic body and the Delhi Jal Board are concerned, 25 or almost 17 per cent from the North Delhi area were declared unsuitable for drinking. The joint testing of 70 samples from the South saw all of them passing the test.

The testing was not undertaken in the East Delhi Municipal Corporation area and hence, the figures for that part are not available in the report. “We have been repeatedly asking both the Delhi Government and the Jal Board to look into the matter but to no avail,” said Leader of the House in North Corporation Mahendra Nagpal while giving details of the report. “This is a serious matter as it concerns public health. The situation will only get worse in the summer months. We can only ask the State Government to look into the matter,” he added.

 

Civic warmth for street children

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The Indian Express                26.04.2013

Civic warmth for street children

Society

Gharte project aims to bring street children into the mainstream of society.

PMC makes medical check-up must for them.

Mandatory annual medical check-up and police verification of each child besides a monitoring body are some add-on steps being taken by Pune Municipal Corporation (PMC) to ensure benefits for street children under the Gharte project that private agencies carry out for the civic body.

The urban community development department of PMC had proposed to extend the contract with three of the four agencies — the contract with one has been scrapped — to continue the Gharte project that aims at bringing street children into the mainstream of society.

The children are provided with food, clothes and accommodation in select civic schools where social workers educate them and teach them proper social habits.

"There was no problem extending the contract of the agencies. However, there were some complaints about facilities given to street children and that needed to be addressed. We have included a few more clauses in the contract to be signed with the agencies," said Vishal Tambe, chairman of civic standing committee.

He said it has been made mandatory for agencies to carry out medical check-up of each child under the project. "The medical reports of children would help us in deciding physical improvement every year. Also, agencies have been asked to get the identity of each child verified by the police department," Tambe said.

Earlier, there was no monitoring body to look into the functioning of each Gharte centre, he said adding that a monitoring agency will be appointed to ensure all the benefits envisaged are passed on to street children.

The PMC had cancelled the contract of one of the agencies after finding it violating set rules. The applications of 10 new organisations that showed interest in the initiative were rejected for lack of experience.

"The agencies appointed for three years will not be given 100 per cent funding and will have to bear 25 per cent of the total expenditure but the demand of an increase in funds per group has been accepted," Tambe said.

The ambitious project was started in 2007 with four centres in different parts of the city where street children were provided food, clothing and education free of cost. At some places, the civic body had made arrangements for the stay of children. The civic body earlier provided 100 per cent funding and paid Rs 61,651 every month for a group of 20 children. Every centre was allowed to have a maximum of four groups and a minimum of two.

 


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