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Public Health / Sanitation

Garbage woes of city likely to pile up

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The Hindu         27.06.2011

Garbage woes of city likely to pile up

Staff Reporter

Agency running Brahmapuram plant decides to opt out of responsibility

 

The Centre for Environment and Development (CED), the agency that has been running the solid waste treatment plant of the Kochi Corporation at Brahmapuram, has decided to opt out of the responsibility.

According to indications, the agency will leave the job within a couple of months. The agency had earlier served the mandatory notice to the civic body indicating its desire to opt out. As the three-month notice period has already expired, the firm can walk out of the contract anytime without any legal hassles.

However, the agency has assured the civic body that it will continue till the civic body identifies another agency for running the plant.

Any delay in finding another agency for the business will have serious repercussions as the plant site is overflowing with garbage collected from various parts of the city.

The CED could not wait for the City Corporation indefinitely and the civic body would have to find some agency to manage the plant, said a senior functionary of CED.

Technical snags

The agency had been running the plant for the past one year. It was during the term of the previous council that the civic authorities invited the agency to support the corporation in making the plant operational. The plant, which was set up using the Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission funds, had developed serious technical snags within one year of its commissioning.

The lack of support from the civic body, including the delay in clearing the bills and shortage of infrastructure facilities, had upset the plans of the CED in properly managing the plant. The shortage of vehicles to be used inside the plant, delay in developing the internal roads and the absence of basic infrastructure had all affected the functioning of the plant. The bills, which were submitted nearly eight months ago, were yet to be paid and the corporation owed the agency around Rs.40 lakh, CED authorities said.

A stage had reached where the agency was not able to implement its scheme for the operation of the plant. Any continuance of the agency in the Brahmapuram plant would affect its credibility. The agency had also incurred considerable loss for supporting the Kochi Corporation in running the treatment plant, he said.

Though the plant was in working condition, considerable time was being lost every day in de-clogging the waste from the machinery.

Water from the nearby river entered the tipping floor, dampening the waste being fed into the machine. The machines needed to be de-clogged and cleaned every hour thus affecting the efficiency of the plant, he said.


  • Centre for Environment and Development has served the three-month notice period

  • Plant site already overflowing with garbage collected from various parts of the city

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    Awareness campaign to fight mosquito menace in city

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    The Hindu        15.06.2011

    Awareness campaign to fight mosquito menace in city

    Staff Reporter

    Municipal Commissioner G. Ravi Babu has instructed the public health officials to start a broad campaign for creating full awareness among the people on the causes of the spread of mosquitoes and also on the diseases that may result from mosquito bite.

    During a visit to inspect anti-larval operations at Gulabithota canal bund colony on Tuesday, Mr. Ravi Babu said that the storage tanks and stagnant water holdings in houses were proving to be breeding grounds for mosquitoes and the participation of the public should there on a large scale to fight this.

    The municipal corporation staff showed to him how water holding containers in some residences were becoming breeding places for larvae.

    Watching the intensity of the problem, Mr. Ravi Babu advised the people to store only enough quantities of water to meet their daily requirements and not go beyond their needs. He said that the growth of larvae was very strong in stored water and it would be better to prevent the outbreak of disease by stopping the growth of mosquitoes at the larval stage itself.

    He said that diseases such as malaria, dengue and diarrhoea would spread because of the mosquito bite and the health staff should actively participate in the campaign to raise awareness on this among the public.

    The water containers should be emptied and cleaned once every week and they should also be dried thoroughly to remove any scope for the growth of the mosquito larvae. For this, every Friday should be observed as a dry day in every house.

    Stating that stagnation was the major problem in this issue, Mr. Ravi Babu directed the sanitation and public health staff to make sure that there would be no standing water in the drains in residential localities and that there should be no blockages in the drainage system.

    The Commissioner ordered for shifting of interested residents to the houses allotted to them under JNNURM scheme. Malaria technical officer Rama Rao and other staff were present during the visit.

    Diseases such as malaria, dengue and diarrhoea will spread because of the mosquito bite, says Commissioner

    Last Updated on Wednesday, 15 June 2011 06:37
     

    Udupi CMC to overhaul garbage collection system

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    The Hindu           01.04.2011

    Udupi CMC to overhaul garbage collection system

    Staff Correspondent

    To improve cleanliness and facilitate scientific garbage disposal, the Udupi City Municipal Council (CMC) has decided to overhaul its entire garbage collection system in the city.

    Hitherto, door-to-door garbage collection in the city was confined to three zones — old city limits, East and West zones. As many as eight self-help groups were involved in the task of door-to-door garbage collection.

    Each house was to pay Rs. 30 a month for the SHGs as a fee for door-to-door garbage collection. The garbage collected was being transported to the Solid Waste Management Plant at Karval in Alevoor village. But this did not work as planned. According to CMC president Kiran Kumar, there was poor response to the door-to-door collection of garbage from houses in areas such as Moodabettu, Malpe, Nittoor and Kodankur.

    Hence the CMC has decided to divide the city comprising 35 municipal wards into 10 zones to improve monitoring and collection of garbage from every house. Each zone would have three or four municipal wards. Tenders would be floated for collection of garbage in every zone.

    “We hope that creation of 10 zones would help the CMC in proper implementation of garbage disposal in the city. But the scheme can be a success only if people cooperate whole-heartedly”, Mr. Kumar said.

    For some big commercial establishments, the charge for collection of garbage was up to Rs. 3,000 a month. But there were about eight such big commercial establishments in the city which generated huge quantities of garbage. Some establishments voluntarily transported their garbage to Karval.

    Udupi city generates about 60 tonnes of garbage daily. The garbage was treated scientifically through land-filling at the plant at Karval. “The use of plastic items by people especially tourists is a major problem. It is creating problems in land-filling”, he said.

    A CMC delegation comprising Mr. Kumar, MLA Raghupati Bhat and CMC Commissioner Gokuldas Nayak had held preliminary talks with a company called Rochem Separation Systems (India) Pvt. Ltd. in Mumbai a week ago for garbage processing and exploring the possibility of generation of power using the garbage.

     


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