Urban News

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

Woes of Njeliyanparamba residents continue

Print PDF

The Hindu                         19.02.2013

Woes of Njeliyanparamba residents continue

Sad plight:Waste from around Kozhikode city piled up at the Njeliyanparamba waste-treatment plant. The untreated waste water flowing out of the plant can be seen. —Photo: S. Ramesh Kurup
Sad plight:Waste from around Kozhikode city piled up at the Njeliyanparamba waste-treatment plant. The untreated waste water flowing out of the plant can be seen. —Photo: S. Ramesh Kurup.
 
10 months since High Court ordered plant upgrade.

The air is still stinking, the water still dark, and disease-carrying mosquitoes still loom around. The arrival of trucks carrying waste from around the city has not stopped.

Ten months have passed since the Kerala High Court directed the City Corporation to upgrade the waste-processing facility at Njeliyanparamba here and to rehabilitate the families who were shifted to temporary shelters within one year. No action seems to have happened on most of these directions.

For A. Mohammed and family, who stay near the plant, living conditions have not changed much since the verdict.

“Loads of waste are still being dumped daily on the plant premises. The stench is unbearable, especially when it rains. Many of us in the locality still get attacks of asthma and have breathing problems. Skin diseases are frequent. Many have died of cancer in the locality over the years,” Mr. Mohammed says.

As per the High Court order dated April 11, 2012, the Corporation was to “make necessary upgrade to the present treatment plant and complete the construction of the leachate treatment plant within six months of the date.” It was also directed by the sections 326 to 332 of the Kerala Municipality Act of 1994 to dispose of the solid waste and filth within a year.

However, a visit to the Njeliyanparamba plant reveals piles of waste dwarfing the plant building itself.

The outlet for ‘treated water’ drains out thick, black-coloured effluents.

“The plant was built here to produce manure. But in the facility here that consists of just a conveyor belt to crush the collected waste, nothing of that sort is possible. The Municipal Solid Waste Management rules state that the ground needs to be concreted to prevent percolation of waste water and poison into the groundwater. Also, waste disposal should not be in the open. All of these rules are still being flouted. We will move the Supreme Court once the one-year period stipulated by the High Court gets over in April,” says O. Koya, a resident of Njeliyanparamba, who led the legal struggle against the plant.

But Mayor A.K. Premajam saysthe delay in upgrade of the plant has been mainly owing to the lack of response from the State government.

‘PPP model’

“The Corporation had submitted a proposal to the government for the upgrade of the plant in a private-public-partnership (PPP) model. We are yet to get a response regarding this. The list of companies and the type of plant can be decided only after we get the government approval. The aim is to develop a plant that can produce energy from the waste and has least rejects,” says Ms. Premajam.

The cases against those who protested against the plant are still pending in courts in the district.

“Many of the residents, including women, were charged with various cases related to destruction of public property and blockade of the highway. Some of the cases are in far-off courts and for most of us, the frequent court visits are affecting our livelihood. This is the price that we paid for a democratic and peaceful protest,” says Mr. Mohammed, who also has a case filed against him.

Mr. Koya says that their legitimate protest was hijacked many times by various political parties for their own ends. But they were able to weed out the regressive political elements from the protest.

He said the Corporation had to insist on biogas plants at all apartment complexes and households, a point that was also part of the High Court order.

Mr. Koya is a man who walks the talk as is evident from the biogas plant in his backyard that produces more than enough fuel to run the kitchen.

He also happily accepts waste from the neighbourhood shops, thus providing a small model for effective waste management.

Last Updated on Tuesday, 19 February 2013 10:10
 

GVMC moves to clean up dump yard

Print PDF

The Hindu                         19.02.2013

GVMC moves to clean up dump yard

Staff Reporter

The GVMC has initiated action to clean up the nearly 80-acre dump yard at Kapuluppada where municipal garbage is being dumped for nearly 17 years now.

It would call for tenders offering an estimated 15-lakh tons of garbage. Price per ton would be decided and some six months would be given to lift the quantity, Municipal Commissioner M.V. Satyanarayana said briefing reporters about the decisions taken by B. Sam Bob, Special Officer of the GVMC and Principal Secretary, Municipal Administration and Urban Development, during his visit last week.

The Special Officer also approved a move to appoint a private agency to do the ground work identifying vacant land in the city for levy of vacant land tax.

Once the work was done, GVMC officials would inspect and take a decision on levying the tax.

Mr. Satyanarayana said around 50,000 plots needed to be identified. In the budget Rs.170 crore was being projected as income from VLT but in reality only Rs.5 crore was being realised.

Survey of properties

The Special Officer also approved survey of GVMC properties, lands and those allotted by the District Collector under the supervision of a retired assistant director of Survey and Land Records. Six surveyors would assist him.

“The entire details will be digitised,” the Commissioner said.

The corporation plans to take up seven-foot footpaths on 52-km stretch in public-private partnership mode. The agency would be allowed to sell advertisement space on the hoardings along the footpaths.

Mr. Satyanarayana said 16 of the 26 kalyanamantapams that had been issued closure notices for lack of fire safety ordered equipment.

Final action would be taken by the month-end.

On a complaint received at the grievances on Monday, he ordered that a kalyanamantapam being run unauthorised on residential premises at Kakaninagar in Ward 67 be closed immediately.

It was one of the decisions taken by GVMC Special Officer B. Sam Bob during his visit to the city last week, says Municipal Commissioner.

Last Updated on Thursday, 18 April 2013 06:47
 

Garbage: a weighty issue for the BBMP now

Print PDF

The Hindu                        18.02.2013

Garbage: a weighty issue for the BBMP now

Chitra V. Ramani

As if solving the garbage crisis was not tough enough, the Bruhat Bangalore Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) is now facing another challenge: of correctly weighing the solid waste generated in the city.

So far, the BBMP had been claiming that around 4,000 tonnes of garbage was generated in the city every day. With the garbage weighing exercise under way, it seems that the BBMP’s approximation was less. According to sources in the BBMP, the weight of the garbage has been varying between 3,200 tonnes and 3,800 tonnes.

Following directions from the High Court of Karnataka, the BBMP has taken up the garbage weighing exercise. A senior official said that garbage weighing was being taken up at Doddaballapura, Mandur and Mavallipura.

While stating that the quantum of garbage cannot be constant, the official said that there may be several reasons for the fluctuations in weight.

After the High Court directed the BBMP to weigh the garbage, there was a proposal to procure at least five or six weighing machines. However, the sources said that BBMP Commissioner Siddaiah rejected the proposal given the civic body’s precarious financial condition.

Mr. Siddaiah told The Hindu that he had issued directions to officials to use private weighbridges. He said that there were a few unused weighing machines at Mandur. He said that he had directed the officials to shift these machines to other landfills in Bingipura and Lakshmipura.

Last Updated on Thursday, 18 April 2013 06:47
 


Page 147 of 265