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Solid Waste Management

Now, send an SMS to get garbage cleared from your locality

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The Times of India            12.09.2013

Now, send an SMS to get garbage cleared from your locality

MANGALORE: If you're worried about garbage piling up in your locality, just send an SMS to 9900536633 in this format - COM, ward number, area/street name, waste not cleared for (number of) days. You'll receive an eight-digit unique number acknowledgment and status report as soon as the garbage is cleared.

The Mangalore City Corporation, in a bid to bring about transparency in solid waste management, had devised a three-pronged strategy. The first one was installing a vehicle-tracking system to monitor the movement of garbage disposal trucks and the second was uploading photographs of clearing of garbage to servers from mobiles by the personnel manning the trucks. The third being implemented after a two-month trial is SMS-based public grievance redressal which plans to address non-clearing of garbage in 60 wards. Manjunath R Shetty, environment engineer a MCC, said the response during the trial was good and depending on the type of complaint, the issue would be addressed within 24 hours to 72 hours.

If the complaint pertains to dustbins in already covered areas, it would be done in 24 hours and others within 72 hours. As of now, 31 vehicles have the Vehicle Tracking System (VTS) which will monitor the route of vehicles. "This was not foolproof and therefore we introduced the uploading of photographs of dustbins before and after clearing the garbage. Often, vehicles with VTS would go near dustbins and return. The vehicle personnel have software uploaded in their mobiles connected to our servers,'' he said.

The corporation server gets about 100-140 photographs daily through this system. The solutions are provided by Kolkata-based Stesalit which has innovative e-governance technologies and solutions which help local governments become more effective.

The area under MCC jurisdiction produces an average of 175 tonnes per day (TPD) of waste, with a daily collection frequency of 160 TPD. The waste collected has a composition of 75% organic, 25% inorganic, 5% combustible and 10% recyclable waste. There are 780 dustbin points and through VTS and photo upload, the corporation is creating a master route plan of the covered area.

 

Solid waste collection and handling promotes recycling of clothes

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The Times of India          04.09.2013

Solid waste collection and handling promotes recycling of clothes

PUNE: In the coming festive season, waste-pickers co-operative SWaCH (Solid Waste Collection and Handling) has planned a drive to collect used clothes, but instead of focusing on charity, its message encourages reuse.

"We want to change the mindset of people giving out their clothes. We want them to think of it as entering the recycling chain and not as a donation," said Manisha Desai, outreach manager, SWaCH.

The clothes collected during the drive will be sold at nominal rates in slums and other areas where people cannot afford retail rates, she said, adding that this is why the organization is asking people to give clothes that are relatively in good condition.

Desai said the drive has been planned between Ganeshotsav and Diwali as it is usually the time for spring-cleaning in most households. Apart from collecting clothes from housing societies, the organization also plans to set up bins in public places.

"We will put up bins in offices for a few days so that it is convenient for employees to bring their old clothes. Similar bins will be put up in malls and clothes stores where shoppers can drop off old clothes," she said, adding that a bin will also be placed at the Indradhanush Environment Centre of the Pune Municipal Corporation.

 

BMC bid to make city garbage free

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The New Indian Express         04.09.2013

BMC bid to make city garbage free

The payment for the work will be made on the basis of weight of the garbage deposited daily at the dumping ground for which BMC will set up a weighing machine. | EPS file photo
The payment for the work will be made on the basis of weight of the garbage deposited daily at the dumping ground for which BMC will set up a weighing machine. | EPS file photo

The city’s revamped sanitation plan has set a target to make the city roads garbage-free as per the new contract finalised by the Bhubaneswar Municipal Corporation (BMC) recently.

The Corporation was contemplating to bring a change in the sanitation model to enforce better hygiene in the city limits. BMC had decided in the past to divide the 53 wards in the city into four zones to simplify the implementation of sanitation projects.

As per the new contract, the city has been divided into four packages and three separate contractors have been assigned the project. Jagruti has been assigned two packages while Ramky Group and PMR Consultants have been handed over one package each.

The most important target of the revamped sanitation model is ‘no garbage on ground’. A senior BMC official said all three sanitation contractors have been asked to ensure supply of adequate amount of dustbins so that no garbage is disposed on the roads. According to the contract, they will take care of sweeping the roads, desilting the drains and collecting the garbage and transporting it to the dumping ground near Sainik School.

The payment for the work will be made on the basis of weight of the garbage deposited daily at the dumping ground for which BMC will set up a weighing machine.

With the city generating about 450 tonnes of garbage everyday, each package is expected to collect roughly 75 tonnes per day.

If any of the contractors fails to gather the requisite amount of garbage, it will be fined. BMC’s City Health Officer (CHO) will be responsible for monitoring the complete sanitation of the city.

The online monitoring system, which ran into controversy last year, will not be a part of the new sanitation model.

As per the previous monitoring mechanism, the attendance of the sanitation workers and garbage collection was monitored online through photographs.

 A private company’s staff clicked photographs of the sanitation workers in the morning and also of the dustbins from where the garbage was collected. These photographs were uploaded on BMC’s website.

But this will not be applicable for the new contractors who will be monitored directly by the CHO and his department. No decision has been taken on the fate of the online monitoring system which many of the corporators had demanded to be shut down last year.

 


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