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Public Health / Sanitation

Open garbage vats & vans on their way out

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The Times of India  04.09.2010

Open garbage vats & vans on their way out

KOLKATA: The whistle-blowing garbage collector, who turns up at your doorstep every morning, may soon go hi-tech. The Kolkata Municipal Corporation plans to junk the archaic, unwieldy tin cart with iron wheels and introduce a modern cart that is easier to negotiate through the city's alleys.

Two options are being evaluated a mechanised cart and a covered handcart with multiple covered bins to ensure that garbage does not spill on the streets. The new cart will sport rubber tyres so you won't have to wince at the irritating grinds and squeaks on the road.

There is more good news. The stink from the open garbage dumps or vats in localities will also be phased out. These dumps are a civic nuisance and a health hazard and have long been a cause for concern among the citizens.

According to the KMC officials, large covered containers with compactors will be placed at strategic locations to crush and store the garbage for disposal. The ramshackle fleet of uncovered garbage transportation trucks will be replaced with covered trucks.

At the dumping ground, too, there is a proposal to introduce heavy-duty compactors to further reduce the volume of garbage. At present, bulldozers level the garbage at Dhapa. The new landfill site will be scientifically developed to prevent leaching and contamination of the soil and ground water.

This complete overhaul of the collection, transportation and disposal of Kolkata's garbage will be executed early next year. The Centre has assured that it will sanction Rs 250 crore for the modernization of solid waste management under the Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission (JNNURM).

" Mayor Sovan Chatterjee has met Union minister of state for urban development Sougata Roy and has been assured that funds will not be a problem," an official said.

KMC would appoint consultants for the modernisation project, the mayor said, adding: "It is a crucial one for Kolkata because it can change the image of the city. By removing the dumps from streets, the association of Kolkata with filth and squalor should disappear."

A similar solid waste management plan, prepared under the Kolkata Environment Improvement Project, had failed to materialize. The Asian Development Bank (ADB) had agreed to fund the Rs 60 crore project on the condition that KMC set up a dumping ground in addition to Dhapa. "We have chosen a site and informed the ADB. We will place the garbage disposal modernisation project before ADB," an official said.

Last Updated on Saturday, 04 September 2010 11:02
 

Garbage piling up in Kottayam town

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The Hindu  04.09.2010

Garbage piling up in Kottayam town

Staff Reporter

KOTTAYAM: Garbage movement in the town remained disrupted for the fourth consecutive day on Friday as the residents of Vadavathur, where the dumping yard is situated, are continuing their agitation.

A meeting of the Municipal authorities on Friday, meanwhile, decided to cancel the earlier move to seek the services of a non-governmental organisation for waste management. According to the municipal authorities, the demands made by the NGO for taking up waste management in the town were unacceptable and impractical.

Another suggestion to find a temporary solution for the problem is now pending with the State Sanitation Mission. Under the present situation, the municipal authorities said, movement of garbage from the town depends solely on the directive of the Kerala High Court, which is expected on Monday.

In the light of the ongoing siege of the dumping site by local people, the court had earlier provided police protection for the movement of garbage. The period had ended last week.

With garbage piling up on road sides, the town is under the threat of communicable diseases, especially against the backdrop of the extended monsoon.

The attempt of the municipal authorities to burn garbage at some points in the town has made the already complicated situation more complex.

Last Updated on Saturday, 04 September 2010 09:40
 

Dengue: MCD jittery

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Hindustan Times  03.09.2010

Dengue: MCD jittery

The Municipal Corporation of Delhi is in a spot over the travel advisories issued by 24 countries, including the US, inquiring into the status of dengue outbreak in the city, ahead of the Commonwealth Games. The US sends such warnings for nearly all major international events. It did so even for
the cricket World Cup, though almost no Americans are expected for the event. To combat dengue, the civic agency, for the first time, has decided to use a special colourless paint (synthetic Pyrethroid) at all sports and training venues of the Games.

 

Pyrethorid has insect repellent properties and is generally harmless to human beings. The paint will safeguard people against mosquito and insect bites for a period of 12 weeks.

Many countries such as Turkey, Sri Lanka, South Africa, and Mexico have been using this chemical to combat malaria and dengue. A team of 100 MCD staffers are currently undergoing training at the National Centre for Communicable Diseases (NCDC).

With 67 new cases reported on Thursday, the total number of cases has reached 1081, with three deaths reported so far. Work started on Thursday at the Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium, where the opening and closing ceremonies of Games will be held. On a trial basis, walls of structures at the Games Village, near Akshardham Temple, which will be used as the residential and training venue by  delegates and athletes during the sports extravaganza, were sprayed with the chemical and showed good results.

“We want to reassure people that we are taking every possible measure to combat dengue. Work has already started and we will cover all the venues within two weeks,” said V K Monga, chairman of Public Health Committee of the MCD. The chemical is being procured from a Mumbai based private company.

But with Games just round the corner the civic agency is claiming that the company is charging more than double the usual amount. “The cost of the chemical is Rs 500 per litre but the company is charging us up to Rs 1,300. We have no option but to go for it,” he added.

Last Updated on Friday, 03 September 2010 11:08
 


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