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Public Health / Sanitation

Animal birth control in city gets a fillip

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The Hindu    25.07.2012

Animal birth control in city gets a fillip

 Staff Reporter
The Chennai Corporation’s animal birth control centre near Elephant Gate receives more than 50 complaints a day —Photo: K. Pichumani
The Chennai Corporation’s animal birth control centre near Elephant Gate receives more than 50 complaints a day —Photo: K. Pichumani

  The Chennai Corporation is likely to permit yet another NGO, International Trust of Peace, to take part in the animal birth control programme (ABC) in added areas of the city.If the Corporation Council approves a resolution on Wednesday, the sterilisation of dogs in various localities of the city will get a boost.

Society of the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, Blue Cross of India and People for Animals are currently shouldering the responsibility of tackling challenges pertaining to animal birth control programme in the city.

After the expansion of the city limits, the number of calls made to the helpline for stray dog control is on the rise. The number of animal birth control operations has touched 1,900 every month.

However, many of the complaints of residents pertaining to stray dogs in the newly added areas fail to elicit the required response from the Chennai Corporation.

The civic body has just a few vans to catch dogs and only some are put to use. In the past three years, the civic body has caught around 55,000 dogs of which over 51,000 have been sterilised.

As a chunk of contract labourers fail to turn up during emergencies, the civic body plans to make use of the services of new NGOs to tackle such problems. Most of the stray dog menace complaints are from expanded areas and more than 50 complaints are received at the Animal Birth Control Centre near Elephant Gate a day.

Last Updated on Thursday, 26 July 2012 04:56
 

City lacking in a sense of urgency?

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The Hindu      25.07.2012

City lacking in a sense of urgency?

Chennai is a city of five million people and it has 714 public toilets. More than half of them are not in a condition to be used and the corporation has been demolishing a few old toilets every month. It is no surprise that one hardly finds a toilet in most public places.

Norms recommend that one public toilet must be provided for every 60 persons in a city. This means that the city is short by thousands. Even if one argues that such standards are applicable only to developed countries, even by a reduced norm, Chennai would fall short grossly.

How then would one put an end to open defecation? Urban poor who depend on shared public toilets are the worst affected. Even if they are ready to pay to use a public facility, there are hardly any options and the few toilets that are in a decent condition are not easily accessible.

A study conducted by Transparent Chennai, an NGO, found that more men than women use public conveniences. In some places, toilets for women are used by men. In most facilities, the space earmarked for bathing and washing clothes is underused due to scarcity of water.

Such a situation also takes a toll on children. It impedes in their toilet training and many children do not want to use them as they are dirty. A study among school children in Kameshwaram (Nagapattinam district), by Friend In Need and United Nations University at Maastricht, Netherlands, found that many children prefer to urinate in the streets as the school toilets are not very clean. The funds allocated for maintenance are minimal and schools concentrate on providing for laboratories and sports facilities rather than maintaining toilets.

The Corporation has announced that it will install 5,000 modern toilets made of high-density polyethylene or polycarbonate sheet cubicles measuring 1.2m x 1.2m each. The toilets will be located adjacent to cinema halls, shopping malls, bus termini, markets and other public spaces. The question, however, is if this will help matters.

It is not just about scaling the numbers. Location, design, privacy and safety are critical issues too. Ideally, one shouldn’t need to walk more than 15 minutes to find a public convenience. Experts say there is need for more urinals.

As far as design is concerned, India has not given it much thought. We lack innovation in design for people with specific needs, such as the elderly or the differently-abled. Even for others, the design has to be hassle-free. It should also be made attractive for children.

The cubicles proposed by the Chennai Corporation have no space for a caretaker. There is no space for washing clothes or bathing. In the past, toilets with caretaker have been maintained better.

The Corporation has announced that it will install 5,000 modern toilets made of high-density polyethylene or polycarbonate sheet cubicles measuring 1.2m x 1.2m each

Last Updated on Thursday, 26 July 2012 04:57
 

Space beneath ROBs becomes dumping grounds for garbage

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The Hindu                 23.07.2012

Space beneath ROBs becomes dumping grounds for garbage

S.Ganesan

Anti-social elements find a safe haven, complain residents

No man’s land:Building debris and garbage are being dumped under the road overbridge at Palakkarai in the city. —PHOTO:R.M. RAJARATHINAM
No man’s land:Building debris and garbage are being dumped under the road overbridge at Palakkarai in the city. —PHOTO:R.M. RAJARATHINAM

While there has been much talk in recent days about the city beautification initiatives, public space beneath many road overbridges in Tiruchi continue to present a picture of squalor and neglect. Public space beneath the Palakkarai and Thennur road over bridges (ROBs), in particular, are turning into convenient dumping grounds for building debris and garbage.

Although the then civic administrators had announced that the open space beneath the bridges (when they were declared open for traffic) would be put to good use, for creating a parking lot or public parks, years have passed by without any initiative in this direction.

The entire space along the bridges on the Thennur High Road, the Heber Road, and the Madurai High Road have now turned shelters for encroachers for varied purposes and for shopkeepers and residents to dump their garbage. Truck and goods van operators also find it a convenient place to park their vehicles. At a few places, the open space with the pillars at regular intervals make for work sheds for a few artisans eking out a living from bamboo products.

Though the city corporation has put up notices prohibiting dumping of garbage or debris beneath the Palakkarai ROB , the warnings have hardly had any impact. “With several construction projects going on in the vicinity along the Heber Road, the debris of demolished buildings are regularly being dumped under the bridge,” says R.Gopal, a resident of Bheema Nagar.

Open spaces beneath the bridge around the Ramakrishna Theatre corner near Thennur has been converted into an open garbage dump and urinal.

The dingy corners beneath the bridges, especially near the Thennur and Palakkarai railway crossings, have also become the refuge of anti-socials, complain residents. Residents also point out though the bridges have been provided with streetlights, the space beneath are unlit, adding to the insecurity of the residents.

Sakunthala Srinivasan, a resident of Anna Nagar, and president, Tiruchi Payaneetalar Iyakkam, has long been complaining about the insecure situation and frequent incidents of chain snatching beneath the bridge at Thennur.

Over the years, the Payaneetalar Iyakkam has been seeking permission from the corporation for creating and maintaining a park beneath the Thennur ROB. But the civic authorities are yet to arrive at a decision on the organisation’s offer.

 


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