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Solid Waste Management

Sandstorm of graft at waste plant

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The New Indian Express                09.03.2013

Sandstorm of graft at waste plant

He said that the funds for transporting lands were allocated under the Chief Minister’s Disaster Relief Fund.

It seems there is no end to the controversies surrounding the  Brahmapuram waste treatment plant. The latest addition to the list is the    alleged irregularities in  the transportation of sand to the plant for dousing the fire. The civic body had entrusted a contractor to transport sand to the plant     after the incident in which plastic waste caught fire on February 15.

According to the Opposition of the Kochi Corporation, the contractor has   submitted to the Corporation that he had transported 3,340 loads of sand to the Plant between February 16 and February 24. “If he had transported 3,340 loads in eight days, a minimum of 17 tipper lorries carrying sand should  have reached the plant every hour throughout day and night from February 16 onwards. But we are sure that such volume of sand was not used for dousing the fire,” alleged an Opposition Councillor.

He said that the funds for transporting lands were allocated under the Chief Minister’s Disaster Relief Fund.

“A total of `1.25 crore was allotted. We have examined the files maintained in the Corporation in this regard. Interestingly, there are no records in that file except a letter from the  Mayor asking the officials concerned to prepare an estimate for the volume of sand required to cover the plastic waste. The letter was issued on February 16,” he alleged.

He said that after the Opposition councillors and some of them from the ruling front raised objections against allotting funds to the contractor for 3,340 loads, the Mayor has asked for a Total Station Survey to assess the volume of sand used for the purpose.

“But even with the help of the survey, it will not be easy to assess the actual volume of sand as it has been spread unevenly. There was not even a   single official from the Corporation office at the plant when the sand was transported. If some responsible officials were there at that time, then a proper account of the number of loads could have been maintained,” he  alleged.

Allegations Denied

Kochi Corporation Health Standing Committee chairman T K Ashraf denied the allegations and said that the Corporation will not allot funds on the basis of the records submitted by the contractor alone. “We have begun the Total Station Survey and the result of the survey regarding the volume of sand used will be submitted to the Chief Town Planning officer, chief engineer and the councillors. The allegations are baseless and we were not able to  prepare an estimate before transporting sand because the plastic waste kept on burning for five days and the work had to begin immediately,” he added.

Last Updated on Saturday, 09 March 2013 10:30
 

Panaji civic body to start four-bin segregation system

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The Times of India                     09.03.2013 

Panaji civic body to start four-bin segregation system

PANAJI: The Corporation of the City of Panaji (CCP) plans to start a 4-bin waste segregation system in Panaji. The system will be started in a phased manner in various parts of the city and will first be implemented in Miramar area.

CCP sources said Panaji generates 26 trucks of dry non-biodegradable waste. Such waste is from households on Mondays and Thursdays on a weekly basis. It comprises of all types of plastics, paper, metal, glass, styrofoam, cloth, shoes, slippers, rexine among other materials. Further sorting of this dry waste into different fractions when it is all heaped together is a tedious, time consuming and labour intensive exercise.

Aiming to solve the problem, the CCP decided to introduce the 4-bin segregation of waste at source, into four categories namely plastics, paper, metal or glass and non-recyclables.

This system was put in place since August, 2011, for all the hotels and restaurants in the city and in around 60 housing colonies which has since helped to effectively treat 13 out of the 26 truck loads of waste generated weekly by the city.

The Miramar area generates four truck loads of dry waste per week. The CCP in its phase-wise plan proposes to start the 4-bin segregation and collection system in Miramar from March 18.

Hundred B.Ed students from the Nirmala institute of education, Altinho, who have been trained by the CCP's waste management cell, will be visiting each household in Miramar on the March 11-12 to explain the modalities of segregating dry waste at source and the collection mode to residents.

Those residents of Panaji who live in areas that are not yet covered by the 4-bin segregation system and who would voluntarily like to help, could deposit their dry segregated waste into the 'Recycling Station' set up at the dry waste sorting centre in St Inez, during working hours only.
Last Updated on Thursday, 18 April 2013 06:40
 

Waste dumped in ‘old bags’

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The Hindu                         08.03.2013

Waste dumped in ‘old bags’

Staff Reporter 

No new schemes in budget to tackle city's garbage problem.

The city Corporation’s budget for 2013-14, presented by Deputy Mayor G. Happykumar on Thursday, says there should be increased focus on waste management.

Even so, no new schemes have been proposed. The proposals seek to continue with the initiatives mooted the previous year which highlights the need to set up decentralised units.

The one visible reform comes in the form of an additional Rs.3 crore being allocated for a project titled, ‘Mini-biogas plants,’ introduced last year with an outlay of Rs.1 crore.

At a press conference after the budget presentation, Mayor K. Chandrika said projects related to clearing of garbage proposed last year could not be deemed as complete, for it was a continuing process. She cited the ‘Suchitwa Nadinum Veedinum’ scheme which focussed on doing away with plastic carry bags. To supplement this, another project at an outlay of Rs.25 lakh aims at setting up Kudumbasree units to manufacture paper and cloth bags.

A package aimed at rehabilitating Cleanwell workers by employing them for the maintenance of pipe-composts or mini-biogas plants has been listed this year as well.

Much of the criticism directed against pipe-compost units stemmed from the fact that after they were put in place, there was no follow-up by Cleanwell workers, as intended. Also, bag-making training was conducted at only one tailoring unit, at Kannammoola.

Listing projects at three government schools and in the Sreekanteswaram ward, Ms. Chandrika said biogas plants would come up at Palayam, Kazhakuttam, Peroorkada, Sree Chitra Tirunal park, Poojappura, and Thycaud. Councillor S. Vijayakumar said the ward-level approach did not take into consideration the non-availability of land.

In response to a question on the commissioning of more plastic shredder machines, the Mayor said the government should bring in a rule whereby the Public Works Department would be mandated to use shredded plastic. The two machines at Palayam, she said, ceased to function, because there was no place to cart away the shredded plastic. As much as Rs.4 crore has been earmarked to set up a waste treatment plant at the Kunnukuzhy abattoir and to set up modern mini-abattoirs at Nemom, Kazhakuttam, and Kudappanakunnu.

A project called ‘Bye bye mosquito’ has also been proposed in the budget wherein five Kudumbasree workers will take up vector-control activities in each ward.

 


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