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Tamil Nadu News Papers

Fight mosquitoes with ‘frog warriors’

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Deccan Chronicle 30.12.2009

Fight mosquitoes with ‘frog warriors’

December 30th, 2009
By Our Correspondent

Dec. 29: Students of two top city schools, Rani Meyyamai and Sharadha Vidyalaya, have come up with an ingenious solution to tackle the perennial mosquito menace in the city—breeding frogs.

They are planning to request the Mayor, Mr M. Subramanian, not to waste corporation money on chemicals, sprayers and fogging machines, but to get his health inspectors “to protect and breed frogs, because the amphibians are natural urban scavengers with mosquito as their prey base.”

The students have now formed an ‘Eco Task Force’ and are collecting signatures from their friends and environmentalists to submit a petition to the mayor raising this demand.

“Frogs consume all the insects and keep the water bodies clean,” said S. R. Ishwariyapriya, a class seven student. “They play a vital role in the food chain and can be cost effective warriors to tackle the mosquitoes.”

“It’s not only the frogs that have disappeared from the city canals but even several species of fishes have become extinct from Cooum and Buckhingham canal,” said a senior biologist of the forest department.

“While several municipalities and Exnora international introduced Gamboosia fish, a fish that has a special appetite for mosquito larvae to control the vector breeding, the project failed in Chennai.”

Mosquitoes remain the city’s perennial problem and residents are wondering whether there will ever be any relief from this menace.

Mosquitoes are happily breeding in the highly polluted drains and canals of Chennai and relentlessly raid the residential areas of Chennai giving sleepless nights to the public.

For the past two decades, larvae control has been taken up in the city but it has not had much of an effect.

The National Institute of Malaria Research a decade back identified that Chennai has become an endemic area for the disease.

Nearly 70 per cent of the malaria cases of the state are from coastal areas of the city including Tondiarpet, Washermenpet, Royapuram, Harbour, Elephant Gate, Mannady and Pulianthope.

The Tamil Nadu Public Health Act of 1939 states no person or local authority shall have, keep or maintain within such area any collection of standing or flowing water in which mosquitoes breed or are likely to breed.

But many corporation drains are not covered and left open in many areas even now. Several government departments including Chennai Metro water, Southern Railway, PWD, and State Highways also ignore the rules.

The corporation commissioner, Mr Rajesh Lakhoni, said the health department was periodically spraying larvicide and pesticides to keep the vector breeding under control.

At present, the civic body has pressed around 1,200 civic staff to remove stagnant water, which is home to mosquitoes.

“We are doing our best to eradicate mosquitoes, but there is no public coordination,” said the corporation health officer, Dr P. Kuganantham.

 

Complaints over garbage growing

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Deccan Chronicle 30.12.2009

Complaints over garbage growing

December 30th, 2009
By Our Correspondent

Dec. 29: Garbage is piling up in parts of Chennai, which has been outsourced to Delhi-based Neel Metal Fanalca for clearing garbage. The residents feel that the NMF has to improve a lot while handling the solid waste.

“Several streets in and around Choolai and Vepery are not swept on a daily basis and the situation is really bad, the residents here feel that the situation was comparatively better when the corporation staff were clearing the garbage earlier,” alleged Mr K. Dharmendar a resident of Madox street. “All our complaints to the local staff had fallen on deaf ears and there is no proper response so far,” he said.

According to corporation sources, the NMF was facing a shortage of staff due to the Sabarimala and festival season. NMF had improved a lot but needs more expertise in handling the situation during festival times, sources added.

When contacted, Mr G. Thirugnansambandham, vice president, NMF admitted that there might be a few stray incidents of garbage stagnation. In fact the number of such complaints in this regard has reduced in the past few months. However, NMF would take all efforts to ensure that the public grievances are addressed at the earliest. Our field supervisors have been instructed to ensure quality work during festival times, he added.

It may be recalled that the city corporation in association with Neel Metal Fanalca removes garbage in Triplicane, Kodambakkam, Adyar and Pulianthope.

 

20m litres of water to wash vehicles

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Deccan Chronicle 30.12.2009

20m litres of water to wash vehicles

December 30th, 2009
By Our Correspondent

Dec. 29: City folk misuse nearly 20 million litres of water every day to wash vehicles ignoring all high-decibel campaigns for water conservation.

As per the transport department there are over 18 lakh two wheelers and four lakh cars in the city. The number of heavy vehicles is around 69,000.Heavy vehicles need more water for cleaning and two wheelers much less.

“We need at least five to seven litres of water for car wash and if it is two – wheelers we need nearly three litres,” says Mr R.Selvarajan, who runs an automobile service centre near Royapettah. “But we cannot avoid it. When the customer demands a water service we will have to splash water. Our source is a borewell in the premises.”

Water conservation experts, however, criticise this habit and say that it hints at the lack of civic sense of Chennaiites.

“The urban elite take it for granted,” says Dr.Sekhar Raghavan, director of Chennai Rain Centre. “When the tap goes dry they cry foul and say they are paying money and they should get water.”

According to the Rainwater Harvesting Law, bath water and wash waster should be recycled and used in toilets and for cleaning vehicles. “This is not being followed at all,” says Dr Raghavan.

The Chennai Metro water Supply and Sewage Board (CMWSSB) also wants to put an end to the misuse of the precious resource.

“The water supplied by the CMWSSB is only for domestic consumption,” says Mr.Shiv Das Meena, chairman of CMWSSB. “We are always advising the public not to use metro water for washing vehicles.”

“It is very difficult to abandon the practice all of a sudden, but I have decided to reduce the number of times I wash my car,” says Mr K.Manikandan, who uses at least 10 litres of water to clean his car every week.

 


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