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Solid Waste Management

Segregation at source may become mandatory

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Deccan Herald          26.08.2012

Segregation at source may become mandatory

Sandeep Moudgal Bangalore,

The City’s failure to adhere to the norm on garbage segregation at source may soon force the State government and BBMP to make it mandatory.

The Palike is keen on such a step and is in the process of verifying whether the Supreme Court’s recent remark on the subject is an observation or a directive. “It is learnt that the Supreme Court has spoken on the matter recently. Whether segregation at source is an observation or a directive is to be verified,” said Palike Commissioner Shankarlinge Gowda.

Palike sources said garbage segregation could reduce the burden on landfills by nearly 80 per cent. Currently, the landfills are overloaded by 3,000 to 4,000 tonnes of waste each day.

When questioned whether the Palike would penalise citizens who failed to segregate garbage, Gowda was ambiguous.

“Nowhere in the country have urban local bodies implemented such a penal clause. May be, we will be the first,” he said.

The garbage crisis, a result of allegations that Ramky and Terra Firma had been disposing of garbage improperly at their landfills, has led the Palike to consider mandatory action.
Gowda said the Palike was currently in talks with two not-for-profit organisations, City Connect and Round Table, to ensure that garbage was segregated at source.

“Our primary focus now is to contain the wet waste within the City, before transporting the rest to landfills,” Gowda said. New garbage tenders had specified that segregation would be mandatorily done by garbage contractors before the waste was sent to landfills, he said.

Legal precedent

There is already a legal precedent governing the separation of garbage types. A 1998 committee under Asim Barman, the former commissioner of the Calcutta Municipal Corporation, had set guidelines for the proper disposal of garbage. Consequently, in an order on February 15, 2000, the Supreme Court had said, “We direct the statutory authorities through their respective heads to ensure proper and scientific disposal of waste in a manner so as to subserve the common good.  

In this connection, they shall endeavour to comply with the suggestions and directions contained in the report prepared by the Asim Barman Committee.”

Clause 3.16 of the Asim Barman report directs that, “All organic and bio-degradable waste collected from households, shops, markets, hotels and other establishments shall first be composted by following suitable methods of composting with or without power generation. Only rejects and domestic hazardous waste shall be carefully landfilled.”

As per the report, all bio-medical waste is to be disposed of as per the bio-medical waste (management and handling) rules of 1998.

Last Updated on Monday, 27 August 2012 06:34
 

We’ll try to convince Mavallipura: Mayor D Venkatesh Murthy

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The Times of India            25.08.2012

We’ll try to convince Mavallipura: Mayor D Venkatesh Murthy

The city needs a quick solution to clear the mountains of garbage. TOI asked mayor D Venkatesh Murthy about BBMP's plan of action

Why isn't BBMP taking up garbage clearance on a war footing?

We are trying our best to convince the villagers of Mavallipura. We must get permission from Karnataka State Pollution Control Board. BBMP officials are working on implementing safety measures at Mavallipura. We are also trying to identify other places for disposing of garbage. As on today , we are sending trucks to Terra Firma at Doddaballapura and Mandur.

Why have you not visited Mavallipura where residents are protesting against the dumping? Why are you reluctant?

BBMP's chief engineer, joint commissioner on solid waste management and the deputy mayor have visited Mavallipura. I understand the villagers' concerns. They may agree to the dumping in their village if we take precautionary measures laid out by the pollution control board. We have convened a meeting with the villagers on August 29. We will sort out the issue.

Some contractors and pourakarmikas are protesting seeking payment of pending bills and salaries...

I will look into the issue immediately.
Last Updated on Saturday, 25 August 2012 08:53
 

Nashik Municipal Corporation likely to decentralize garbage collection services

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The Times of India    24.08.2012

Nashik Municipal Corporation likely to decentralize garbage collection services

NASHIK: After a heated discussion in the general body meeting on Thursday regarding clearance of garbage in the city by ghantagadi services operated by a contractor, the NMC is likely to decentralize garbage collection by appointing prabhagwise ghantagadi contractors.

Mayor Yatin Wagh, while concluding the deliberation on the issue, asked municipal commissioner Sanjay Khandare to draft a revised proposal. Corporators cutting across party lines expressed anger over shoddy garbage disposal by the existing contractor. The proposal to float fresh tenders amounting to Rs11 crore to collect garbage across the city through ghantagadis and place it at the fertilizer project at Pathardi was tabled . Sanjay Khandare said, "We will have to appoint 61 contractors in 61 prabhags (each prabhag has two corporators) if we appoint prabhagwise contactors. Each prabhag is geographically small or large. Hence we will have to study the needs of each prabhag in terms of number of ghantagadis and labourers."

The opposition leader in the House, Sudhakar Badgujar of the Shiv Sena said, "The NMC has its own 121 ghantagadis and the diesel to run these are also supplied by the NMC. Only the labourers are appointed by the contractor. At this juncture, it will cost around Rs 5 crore if NMC starts garbage collection on its own."

Shailesh Dhage of the Shiv Sena said, "NMC has committed a mistake by appointing only a single contractor for the whole city and they have no control over the contractor. Hence, ghantagadi contractors should be appointed at the prabhag level."

The standing committee of the NMC, during its meeting on August 13, had extended the contract of garbage collection from all six divisions of the civic body by two months. The contract was to end on August 22 this year.



Last Updated on Friday, 24 August 2012 09:49
 


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