Urban News

  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size
Solid Waste Management

HC seeks report from Palike on garbage

Print PDF

Deccan Herald                26.04.2013

HC seeks report from Palike on garbage

The High Court of Karnataka on Friday directed the Bruhat Bangalore Mahanagara Palike to submit a report on the steps taken to tackle garbage crisis in the City.

During the hearing of a batch of petitions on garbage menace in Bangalore, the Division Bench comprising Justices

N Kumar and B V Nagarathna observed that mere acquisition of land to dump garbage would not solve the problem. “The Palike will have to take up steps to set up waste processing units for scientific disposal of garbage,” the Bench noted.

The Court directed the Palike commissioner to place before it, the reports of a panel headed by him and that of the technical committee headed chief engineer, before May 27.

The counsel for the Karnataka State Pollution Control Board submitted the report on the status of processing and disposal of municipal solid waste. The Board has found unscientific disposal of solid waste at the landfills and processing units of the Palike.

Notice issued


The Division Bench comprising Chief Justice D H Waghela and Justice B V Nagarathna has issued notices to the State government and the department of Women and Child Development for not providing basic facilities to anganwadi centres and its workers. The Court had taken up a suo motu public interest litigation following media reports about poor infrastructure at anganwadi centres. The Bench has also directed the government to file its objections to the petition.

CA site


The High Court has issued notice to the Bangalore Development Authority in a petition alleging allotment of a civic amenity (CA) site to a private company. Ramarao Layout Residents’ Association has approached the court accusing the BDA of violating the rules while allotting a CA site to a Laghu Udyog Bharati, a Maharashtra-based company. The petitioner has alleged that the firm located on a CA site was causing problems to the residents in the vicinity.

Time extended


The High Court has granted another four months to the Justice B Padmaraj Committee probing into irregularities in allotment of ‘G’ category sites by the Bangalore Development Authority during the period 2006 to 2009. The Division Bench headed by Justice K L Manjunath passed the order on an application filed by the committee seeking more time to submit its report. The Court had constituted the committee following a public interest litigation filed by Vasudev, alleging irregularities in allotment of ‘G’ category sites. The committee was to submit its report by April-end.

Last Updated on Saturday, 27 April 2013 06:37
 

Delayed GVMC’s new SWM plan to be restricted

Print PDF

The Hindu                25.04.2013

Delayed GVMC’s new SWM plan to be restricted

The much-publicised decentralised solid waste management sought to be introduced by GVMC will take more time to be in place. Besides, instead of implementing it all over the city it will be restricted to selected 52 wards.

The new SWM was first proposed to be implemented in the first week of March. Later it was postponed to mid-April and an elaborate plan worked out for training and awareness campaign.

However, a final decision on the GVMC general body resolution handing over integrated solid waste management to Ramky Enviro Engineers is still awaited.

The GVMC had first thought of purchasing push-carts for collection of garbage from door-to-door with its funds. However, with the government still not deciding on handing over ISWM to Ramky, in spite of having called for tenders it has second thoughts on whether to go ahead with the plan or it as the infrastructure had to be handed over to the agency. Another key issue is the reported unwillingness of the company to absorb all the sanitation workers GVMC has now. Having considered the implications, it has been decided to seek the support of corporates under corporate social responsibility (CSR). Having reduced the number of wards for implementation, the cost has also been brought down from Rs.4 crore to Rs.2 crore. HUDCO and Visakhapatnam Port Trust have come forward to contribute for taking up the SWM besides three or four other corporates, it is reliably learnt.

Tenders have been finalised and work orders issued for buying push-carts, say sources.

When contacted, Municipal Commissioner M.V. Satyanarayana told The Hindu that due to the various constraints involved there had been a delay in launching the SWM. “The plan will be implemented. Everything will be in place in next three to four weeks and in a month we hope to launch the plan,” he adds.

 

The burning issue of plastic waste

Print PDF

The Hindu                20.04.2013

The burning issue of plastic waste

Daily scene:Plastic wastes being burnt near the bypass opposite to the Sarovaram Bio Park.— Photo: K. Ragesh
Daily scene:Plastic wastes being burnt near the bypass opposite to the Sarovaram Bio Park.— Photo: K. Ragesh

Kozhikode district declared ‘plastic-waste-free’ in 2011.

At a stone’s throw from Sarovaram, a government-owned multi-crore bio-park in the city, herds of swine roam nonchalantly amidst heaps of plastic and human waste.

This sight is proof of the growing menace of illegal dumping of waste by private contractors within urban limits.

What was once a green space bordering the K.C. Chandran Road leading to the affluent Jaffer Khan residential colony and, further, the Regional Science Centre and Planetarium — a prime spot in the city — has now become a dump yard.

In the mornings, acrid smoke from the burning plastic seep onto the adjacent mini-bypass connecting Eranhipalam Junction with the city’s retail trade hub, Mavoor Road.

Corporation’s sanitation workers also contribute to the residents’ misery. On any given day, workers unload garbage here. Residents say the garbage is then segregated and cleaned at the nearby Canoly canal, before some of it making its way to the plastic recycling unit at West Hill. But a large part of the waste is left back, tied up in plastic covers and abandoned to the pigs.

“This is an example of how land within urban limits is used for illegal dumping of waste. There is a strong stink when plastic waste is burnt. Garbage is dumped here at night. It is impossible to keep watch, as the place is secluded after dark except for the passing traffic on the by-pass,” Jolly Jerome, a member of the Sarovaram Residents’ Association, said.

Many locals in the area such as Mr. Jolly pointed to how plastic waste continued to pile up in the city despite the district being declared “plastic-waste-free” way back in 2011 with much fanfare. They said all that was just empty rhetoric.

In a well-attended function organised by the district administration, an official declaration was made that Rs.50 lakh would be spent to take forward the Mass Action for Plastic-waste-free Kozhikode (MAP) campaign.

An example?

A. Pradeepkumar, MLA, had said at the function organised on the Kozhikode beach that the district was setting an example for others to emulate and called plastic waste as “one of the major threats to our future.”

M.K. Raghavan, Kozhikode MP, had unveiled a set of alternative products to plastic carry-bags at the venue. More than 50,000 such carry-bags were distributed free to people at the venue.

“But today, places like the one at K.C. Chandran Road is the district’s reality,” P.T. Valsalan, General Secretary of the Residents Apex Council, an umbrella body for residents, said.

“We are going to keep two security persons at the entrance of this road to prevent garbage trucks from illegally entering this space. The residents associations of the area have agreed to pay for the security people,” O.M. Bharadwaj, the local Corporation councillor, said.

 


Page 113 of 265