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Garbage containers will be removed: MCC Commissioner

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The Hindu       22.12.2014     

Garbage containers will be removed: MCC Commissioner

Corporation had purchased over 250 containers earlier

The Directorate of Urban Development has issued a circular to corporations and municipalities to stop buying containers and to withdraw containers that are in use.— PHOTO: M.A. SRIRAM
The Directorate of Urban Development has issued a circular to corporations and municipalities to stop buying containers and to withdraw containers that are in use.— PHOTO: M.A. SRIRAM

The Directorate of Urban Development has instructed all city corporations, and city and town municipalities not to buy containers to collect garbage, as well as dumper placer vehicles. It also instructed civic bodies to disuse containers and dumper placers which had already been purchased.

The directorate further directed corporations and other municipal bodies to shift garbage collected from primary sources through house-to-house collection to garbage trucks and send it to decentralised garbage processing units or landfill sites.

Nuisance

It said that people would not put garbage properly into the containers and civic bodies would not lift the garbage periodically, creating a nuisance to passersby and people near the containers. Hence, the directorate found that garbage containers was not an ideal solution. In accordance with a directorate issued recently, the Mysore City Corporation had decided not to purchase containers hereafter nor to repair damaged containers.

C.G. Betsurmath, Commissioner of Mysuru City Corporation, told The Hindu here today that the Corporation had purchased over 250 containers sometime ago and they were placed at certain points in the city.

He said that many of them, which were in a ramshackle condition, were being withdrawn and in another three to four months there would be no garbage container in any part of the city. The Commissioner said that the corporation had already commenced collecting segregated garbage from households, hotels and restaurants and other shops.

The Corporation took up a drive to create awareness among people about the need to segregate waste. It had distributed over three lakh dust bins to BPL families and to people living in different slums in Mysuru city, he said.

However, containers in many parts of the city are overflowing with filth and garbage. The Corporation had spent crores of rupees to buy containers few years ago.

 

‘Zero waste management centres should solve garbage crisis’

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The Hindu          22.12.2014 

‘Zero waste management centres should solve garbage crisis’

The main reason for withdrawing garbage containers is to induce people to segregate garbage into wet waste and dry waste and hand it over to garbage collecting personnel accordingly. Earlier, residents would dump unsegregated garbage in containers and sometimes all around it, irrespective of whether the container was filled or not.

Shopkeepers complain

There are many other reasons for withdrawing containers. People, particularly shopkeepers, quarrel with the Corporation staff over the placing of the containers. At many places, including Bengaluru and Mysuru, people had brought pressure on civic bodies to shift the containers.

Shopkeepers felt that placing garbage containers near their shop would discourage customers from coming into their shops. Certain corporations and town municipalities have no definite period of clearing garbage from containers, result in overflowing garbage in containers. C.G. Betsurmath, Commissioner of Mysore City Corporation, told The Hindu here today that the corporation had set up nine zero-waste management centres and of them eight have already been functioning in the city. The nine centres would cover almost entire city.

If needed, the corporation would set up few more such centres, he said, adding that there would be no need to place garbage containers in streets and residential areas once these centres are up and running.

 

545 JNNURM buses to hit the road by March-end

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The Hindu       04.12.2014 

545 JNNURM buses to hit the road by March-end

Transport Minister Ramalinga Reddy assessing the progress of work at the JNNURM Bus Depot site in Udupi on Wednesday.
Transport Minister Ramalinga Reddy assessing the progress of work at the JNNURM Bus Depot site in Udupi on Wednesday.

Transport Minister Ramalinga Reddy said on Wednesday that 545 city buses under Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission (JNNURM) would be introduced in many towns of the State by the end of March 2015.

Speaking to reporters after inspecting the KSRTC Bus Deport and construction of JNNURM Bus Depot here, Mr. Reddy said these included 30 city buses each under JNNURM for Udupi and Bhadravati, 35 each for Mangaluru, Bhadravati and Hassan, 50 each for Ramanagaram and Davangere, 65 for Shivamogga, 25 each for Kolar and Kolar Gold Fields, 45 additional buses for Tumakuru, and 125 additional buses for Mysuru.

To another question, he said Rs. 6 crore had been sanctioned for the construction of JNNURM Bus Depot here. The work was expected to be completed by March 2015. Once the depot was ready, city buses under JNNURM would be started here.

Already 40 cents of land belonging to the Department of Public Instruction had been identified for a bus-stand for the JNURUM city buses near the City Bus-stand. Though the department had released Rs. 1.45 crore for the construction of a building on this land, it would be shifted to the Board High School here to make way for the JNNURM Bus-stand.

The KSRTC Bus-stand for Udupi would be constructed on 2 acres and 94 cents of land at Bannanje here. This land belonged to the Public Works Department. Talks were on with the Public Works Department to get the land transferred to the Transport Department. New KSRTC bus-stands would be constructed in all those towns which did not have them in the next two years. The aim was to provide better facilities for passengers.

On two private buses catching fire in the last two days, he said the Transport Department had issued 12 guidelines for the safety of all buses. But in these two cases, the reason for the fire was accident, Mr. Reddy said.

Pramod Madhwaraj, MLA, and P. Yuvaraj, president of the Udupi City Municipal Council, were present.

 


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