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Public Health / Sanitation

MCD workers won’t clean loos

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Hindustan Times  24.09.2010

MCD workers won’t clean loos

It was a last-minute, face-saving, clean-up effort. But the thick layer of filth and faeces on the expensive Italian marble flooring in the toilets of the Commonwealth Games Village apartments was so nauseating that even professional cleaners refused to clean it up. The Municipal Corporation of Delhi (MCD) categorically told the government its workers would not clean the supremely dirty toilets, sources told HT. Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit, who visited the Village twice on Thursday, has reportedly asked the New Delhi Municipal Council (NDMC) to step in and assist the private agency that was engaged to clean the place. 

“MCD staff are trained to maintain roads, collect garbage, sweep floors, even mop them. But they won’t clean the toilets. It is not their job. We decided at a meeting today that NDMC staff will supplement the private agency in cleaning rooms and toilets,” said an official.

An army of MCD sanitation workers sporting maroon aprons started cleaning the Augean stables of the Village early on Thursday.

Armed with brooms, floor mops, buckets and wheelbarrows, they moved into every nook and corner, cleaning up at a furious pace. But the toilets defeated even them.

Top officials including Delhi’s chief secretary, the Delhi Development Authority vice-chairman, the MCD and others spent hours at the Village to ensure workers did a thorough job.

The work will go on through two shifts from Friday to meet the Games deadline.

“We had to remove loose construction waste, clean up pools of accumulated stagnant water and mop the floors. We’ve carried out fogging and spraying too,” said a senior MCD official.

Last Updated on Friday, 24 September 2010 09:30
 

Pourakarmikas want contracts for Nirmala toilets

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The New Indian Express  24.09.2010

Pourakarmikas want contracts for Nirmala toilets

 

BANGALORE: Members of the Karnataka Dalita Rakshana Vedike and pourakarmikas allegedly poured human excrement on themselves to ensure that the contracts to maintain Nirmala toilets is given only to them.

They protested BBMP's plan to outsource the maintenance of these toilets. The even tried to give the BBMP Commissioner Siddaiah a memorandum on the issue. But Siddaiah is said to have told them that he would submit the same to BBMP and asserted that the law permits that contracts can be entrusted only through a tender process.

The protesters stated that there were 126 Nirmala toilets in the city that were being managed by pourakarmikas and the responsibility was now being taken away from them.

The pourakarmikas had earlier got a stay order issued on this matter and the courts asked BBMP to maintain status quo on the issue of outsourcing the management of these toilets.

Siddaiah said the matter would have to be referred to the council. The protesters also laid siege to the commissioner's vehicle on Wednesday when he told them that he was not the sole authority to decide on the issue. It was also alleged that protesters did not pour human excrement, but only waste food to get attention.

The police had to intervene and 14 people were taken into custody. BBMP officials later said that the police had charged the protesters under IPC sections 143,145,186,278, 290, 120(b), 504, 149 and remanded them to judicial custody.

Last Updated on Friday, 24 September 2010 09:13
 

Sewer backflow swamps North Delhi

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The Times of India  23.09.2010

Sewer backflow swamps North Delhi

NEW DELHI: Residents of Mukherjee Nagar, Bela Road and Civil Lines woke up to overflowing toilets and sewage on streets on Thursday as a massive backflow led to waterlogging in several parts of north Delhi.

With the Yamuna in spate, gates of many sewer lines had been shut a few days ago to prevent the water from flowing into these. However, this led to sewage accumulating in the pipes, leading to a spillover into homes and streets.Residents complained that 4-5 feet of sewage had accumulated on a few roads, causing not only traffic problems but also serious health concerns.

Amit Khurana, a resident of Mukherjee Nagar, said the entire ground floor of his house had about two feet of sewage.

``On Wednesday morning, the toilets started overflowing. It led to a huge mess in the entire house and a terrible stench. We called the Delhi Jal Board (DJB) helpline but were told that nothing could be done about it. All morning, my wife and domestic help threw out the water in buckets but it did not help since the toilets kept overflowing for a long time.''

The Municipal Corporation of Delhi helpline too got several distress calls all through Wednesday as basements and ground floors got waterlogged. ``We were out of the house during the day and when we returned around 3pm, found that our first floor was under a few feet of water. Initially, we thought that it was the Yamuna water but then neighbours said it was sewage. This problem occurs quite frequently when the river floods but it has never been this bad,'' said Anjali Mishra, a resident of Civil Lines.

Irrigation and flood control officials said they had asked DJB to pump out the sewage and release it in the main drains, but DJB officials said they couldn't do much at this point of time.

DJB CEO Ramesh Negi told TOI: ``We are locally pumping out the sewage but there is nothing else that can be done as long as the river is in spate. Irrigation and flood control had to shut off the gates to prevent the flood water from entering the sewage lines but the accumulated sewage is now coming out through toilets and manholes. When the river flooded in the first half of September, we had to close down the Coronation Pillar sewage treatment plant but this time we haven't done it so far.''
Last Updated on Thursday, 23 September 2010 11:46
 


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