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Solid Waste Management

Councillors ready action plans for drive

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The Hindu                29.04.2013

Councillors ready action plans for drive

Staff Reporter

Corporation to hold ward-level awareness conventions to drive home the idea.

As many as 52 councillors have submitted pre-monsoon cleaning action plans to the City Corporation. The civic body intends to combine the drive with ward-level awareness conventions to promote decentralised garbage treatment, Health officials have said.

The various subsidies available on household-level treatment equipment would be highlighted, they said.

“In the first phase of the drive, Rs.10,000 will be allocated to each ward.

A meeting will be held on April 30.

All Councillors and officials concerned will take part and discuss the activities to be undertaken in each ward. The meeting will also discuss the objectives of the conventions — to be spread over two months,” Health standing committee chairperson S. Pushpalatha said.

For the drive, the Suchitwa Mission will provide Rs.10,000 to each ward.

The National Rural Health Mission will provide as much and the civic body will contribute Rs.5,000.

The meeting will also discuss the launch of the ‘Bye-Bye Mosquito’ programme.

The drive envisages de-silting of drains and culverts, carting away mounds of garbage from residential areas, and clearing of overgrown premises and roadsides. Health Inspectors will oversee the bypass cleaning drive in the six health circles concerned every Wednesday.

The Corporation and the Suchitwa Mission are likely to set up high-capacity biogas plants in all the 100 wards, sharing the cost evenly.

The Corporation may not but have enough land in every ward to execute the project, officials said.

 

Garbage crisis: BBMP seeks time to submit report

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The New Indian Express                 27.04.2013

Garbage crisis: BBMP seeks time to submit report

Counsel representing the BBMP said that the BBMP officers were busy with elections and sought more time to file a report |EPS
Counsel representing the BBMP said that the BBMP officers were busy with elections and sought more time to file a report |EPS

The Karnataka High Court on Friday directed BBMP commissioner H Siddaiah to submit reports of the expert committee headed by him and the technical committee headed by the Chief Engineer which were constituted to look into the garbage problem in the City.

A special division bench comprising of Justice N Kumar and Justice B V Nagarathna, which was constituted to hear the case, passed the directions on a bunch of PILs seeking direction to the state government and BBMP to take steps to solve the garbage problem in the city.

The Bench said, “The expert committee was constituted six months ago and the technical committee had been constituted four months ago, but both did not submit their report. If you cannot submit a report, how can the court pass directions?”

Counsel representing the BBMP said that the BBMP officers were busy with elections and sought more time to file a report. The Bench directed the BBMP commissioner to submit both reports by the next date of hearing and adjourned the case till May 27.

The bench pointed out that BBMP will have to take steps to set up waste processing units for effective and scientific disposal of garbage.

Meanwhile, Karnataka State Pollution Control Board (KSPCB) has submitted its report on the status of municipal solid waste processing and disposal in BBMP areas. It stated that it found serious violation and unscientific disposal of solid waste in all the BBMP-identified landfills and processing units.

 

HC summons DDA VC for lack of garbage dumping ground

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The Pioneer                 27.04.2013

HC summons DDA VC for lack of garbage dumping ground

The Delhi High Court has summoned the Vice-Chairman of Delhi Development Authority on a petition filed against the Municipal Corporation of Delhi and the Delhi Government alleging that rising garbage heaps and scarcity of landfill areas are affecting ground water quality, making it poisonous. During the hearing, the MCD has contended that the DDA has failed to provide enough land for the garbage dumping ground in the Capital.

The court, headed by Justice GS Sistani, has asked SK Srivastava, Vice-Chairman of Delhi Development Authority along with Commissioners of all MCDs and Secretary of Urban Development to appear in court on the next hearing scheduled for May 14.

In the meanwhile, the Delhi Government, MCD and DDA have been directed to conduct a meeting and work together on the solution and file a joint report on the matter. The meeting is to be headed by Chief Secretary of Delhi Government.

The MCD had earlier filed an application in the Supreme Court against the DDA complaining about the scarcity of landfill sites, after which the apex court transferred the High Court to identify dumping grounds for the disposal of municipal solid waste.

“Under the Master Plan 2021, the DDA had to provide the MCD with 1500 acres of land for the purpose of dumping waste but we have 150 acres only. The DDA needs to be pressurised to provide the land immediately,” said Sumeet Pushkarna, Counsel for MCD.

The high court had previously given direction to identify the dumping grounds. Some of the landfill sites identified are Ghazipur east and Ghummanhera (south-west Delhi) among others which have been objected to by the nearby residents. With huge heaps of garbage dumped everyday, these sites have become an environmental threat. The ones already in the radar are Bhalswa and Okhla with 30-40 metre tall garbage heaps.

 


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