Urban News

  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size
Public Health / Sanitation

Cleaning up to keep the flow

Print PDF

The Hindu             26.06.2013

Cleaning up to keep the flow

Staff Reporter

Corporation has launched a mass cleaning drive in various parts of the town here on Tuesday.

Mayor L. Sasikala Pushpa inaugurated the operation aimed at ensuring cleaner environment ahead of the monsoonal showers in Tuticorin.

Sanitary workforce was involved in removing sand and dirt on Palayamkottai Road and on Tiruchendur Road.

Besides, drainage channels were desilted in parts of Toovipuram.

Once roadsides were cleaned, problems of clogging of drains and water logging could be reduced.

Water logging during the rainy season offer breeding grounds for the mosquitoes.

In public interest

Hence, the cleaning measures were taken up in public interest, the Mayor said.

Duraimani, Personal Clerk to Mayor (Corporation), Stalin Pakyanathan, Sanitary Inspector, E. Gnanasekaran, Public Relations Officer were present.

 

“Butterfly nets, the safest way to catch community dogs”

Print PDF

The Hindu             26.06.2013

“Butterfly nets, the safest way to catch community dogs”

The ABCs of animal treatmentActivists say catching dogs with a rope could strangle the animals to death or even break their necks, paralysing them permanently —Photo: T. Singaravelou
The ABCs of animal treatmentActivists say catching dogs with a rope could strangle the animals to death or even break their necks, paralysing them permanently —Photo: T. Singaravelou

For several years now, the Municipality and other agencies employed to capture community dogs for ABC (Animal Birth Control) have been using a rope to catch the dogs.

Recently, following the visit of Government of India officials, the Municipality experimented with various other methods, including the use of blow pipes.

Animal rights groups across the town, however, object to these methods for catching the community dogs and they are asking that the Municipality and the SPCA, who are in charge of ABC programme for the dogs, change their approach and adopt better methods for capturing the dogs.

According to R. Kanimozhi from the SCAN foundation, in the past two months, there have been a number of reports in the media about cruelty to animals in the name of ABC.

On April 2, around 25 dogs in Lawspet were killed using lethal weapons and logs because they were considered a menace to society.

Recently, there was a report in The Hindu about the veterinary doctor of the Municipality K. Coumarane using a blow pipe to capture dogs.

“It is a mockery to see a professional veterinarian using a method that is meant for wild animals on community dogs,” she said.

The blow pipe, with the injection that is used for wild animals, could puncture vital organs of the dog and even cause instant death, she added. Many newspapers have started carrying stories of “dog menace” but most of them are untrue and unacceptable.

Following these articles, the municipal authorities seem to have increased their efforts to capture dogs using dangerous methods and employing labourers who do not care about the safety of the animals and who do not know anything about animal handling, Ms. Kanimozhi said.

Catching dogs with a rope could strangle the animals to death or even break their necks, paralysing them permanently.

Secondly, the move is a danger to the dog catcher, since the dog will be more prone to violence when caught in this way.

Offering some suggestions for the proper capturing of dogs, R.B. Kannan from the People’s Animal Welfare Society (PAWS) said, places like Bangalore have now switched from using ropes to using what is called a “butterfly net”. Using the net, dog catchers will be able to easily catch the community dogs.

The butterfly net is simply a net that is attached to the end of a stick. The dog catcher will have to simply put the net on top of the dog and scoop it up. Dogs captured in this way will tend to be more docile.

There are several volunteer organisations that are willing to also contribute to the ABC programme to ensure that the dogs are treated in a more humane way. So far, only the SPCA has been given permission to conduct ABC operations and their methods have been violent, Raghu, Secretary of PAWS said.

A few animal welfare organisations, including Animal India Trust, have submitted proposals to the government, but they have been rejected, he said.

By using the butterfly net and other standardised procedures to perform ABC will ensure that the supposed “dog menace” is reduced and at the same time the animals are not handled cruelly, he added.

 

Private malaria workers to battle mosquitoes

Print PDF

The Hindu             26.06.2013

Private malaria workers to battle mosquitoes

Pre-emptive actionThe workers will desilt drains, rid the area of breeding sources and check overhead tanks in houses. Adyar reports the maximum number of cases of malaria and dengue every year —Photo: M. Karunakaran
Pre-emptive actionThe workers will desilt drains, rid the area of breeding sources and check overhead tanks in houses. Adyar reports the maximum number of cases of malaria and dengue every year —Photo: M. Karunakaran

This year, the Chennai Corporation has a new strategy to deal with the annual mosquito menace and the diseases it causes.

Private malaria workers will be deployed in zones along the Adyar River, to cope with the rising mosquito densities from July to October. The workers will carry out mosquito control operations — they will desilt drains, rid the area of breeding sources, fog the locality and check overhead tanks in households.

Adyar has been chosen as the pilot area as it sees a rise in mosquito density every year, and reports the maximum number of mosquito-related diseases such as malaria and dengue.

On Wednesday, the Corporation Council is likely to pass a resolution on using the services of 150 private workers for wards 170 to 182. The wards cover 1.33 lakh households.

These 150 workers will be in addition to the 142 permanent malaria workers who already carry out mosquito control operations along the Adyar River. The initiative is likely to be extended to other zones where the mosquito density is of alarming proportions.

“The number of permanent malaria workers is just not enough,” said a Corporation official.

“The recent drive to clear debris in the Adyar River has reduced the mosquito density in our ward. But some neighbourhoods continue to report large numbers of mosquitoes. The additional malaria workers will help residents considerably,” said S. Murugan, councillor of ward 177.

The civic body has spent crores of rupees cleaning the Adyar River and the Buckingham Canal in a bid to control mosquito breeding this year.

The initiative started on March 18. Officials said it had considerably decreased mosquito breeding, leading to a reduction in the adult density of mosquitoes from 40 in May 2012 to 8 this year. The larval density too, has reduced from 6 in May 2012 to 1 in 2013.

However, the intermittent rains and water scarcity this month are likely to lead to artificial and natural mosquito breeding grounds cropping up over the next few months. This may pose a serious challenge to mosquito control operations, an official said.

The private malaria workers will start work on July 1.

 


Page 54 of 200