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Public Health / Sanitation

Madurai works on waste to avoid bird hits to planes

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The Hindu 23.04.2010

Madurai works on waste to avoid bird hits to planes

April 23rd, 2010
April 22: With the Corporation’s garbage dumping yard located less than three km from Madurai airport, and the threat of a fatal bird hit to an aircraft a clear and present danger, the Directorate-General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) has issued stringent guidelines to the civic body regarding waste processing.
However, the DGCA has granted approval for the scientific disposal of waste in the dumpyard where about 450 tonnes of garbage generated daily from within the corporation limits is dumped.

The corporation has proposed a Rs 57 crore project for the scientific closure of the existing accumulated waste of about 13 lakh cubic metres.

With the DGCA and the Tamil Nadu Pollution Control Board giving the go-ahead, the project has now taken off. But both the bodies have laid down stipulations and have asked the civic body to conform to the conditions.

The Directorate-General of Civil Aviation has stipulated that the processing of waste disposal should be carried out in a covered area as the smell of garbage attracts birds because of which there could be bird hits by aeroplanes flying in the zone.

For the first week, garbage should be mandatorily dumped in a covered place. The authorities should ensure that there is no spillover during the transportation of rubbish from the city to the dumpyard as the trucks use the approach road to the airport to reach the site.

It has also laid down conditions on landscaping. Long grass should not be grown to avoid birds being drawn to the area, official sources said. Also, there is a strict ban on burning trash.

They said the Directorate-General of Civil Aviation officials are empowered to carry out field inspections to check if the rules are being followed.
 

Stress on housekeeping to tackle mosquitoes

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The Hindu 23.04.2010

Stress on housekeeping to tackle mosquitoes

Ramya Kannan

CHENNAI: Sunday is World Malaria Day. What are we doing talking about an infectious disease in a column on lifestyles that influence health? Believe it or not, it was altering lifestyles and choices that actually helped Chennai city beat down the anopheles mosquito that causes the shivers.

What a number of people forget often is that they are themselves the reason for the proliferation of mosquitoes. Breeding stations for mosquitoes are aplenty within the domestic area: overhead tanks, unused tyres, mugs, pots, buckets lying in a corner, sewers, septic tanks. These mosquitoes cause not only malaria, but also filariasis, dengue, Chikungunya and of course a great deal of nuisance even when they are not spreading disease.

S.Elango, director of Public Health, says, “As a public health expert, we want a safe, healthy environment that would be free from vectors. By that, we mean an area that does not provide breeding grounds for any type of insect that transmits diseases.” It is easy to underestimate the value of housekeeping, but it is only science that comes into play when public health experts judge a house for its cleanliness.

“Will this house help mosquitoes breed and thrive is what we are asking.”

Housekeeping is very important, he stresses. Dispose all unused goods such as plastics and tyres and ensure that while they are at home, no water collects in them. Clearing out the air conditioners drip containers, water pots and flower vases inside the house is very important, according to him.

Chennai is, in fact, one of the endemic areas in Tamil Nadu for malaria (others include Rameswaram, Madurai and Coimbatore). However, in the capital city, the only strategy that worked to bring down the numbers of malarial cases every year was one that appealed to home owners and tenants directly.

Then the ‘Dry Day' concept indicated to residents especially in North Chennai that day of the month when they had to clean their water tanks. This way, the tanks were cleaned of the larva breeding in and a significant drop in the number of cases occurred.

The Housing Board tenements were also required to have sealed, pot-shaped water tanks, instead of uncovered tanks. This helped changed the situation drastically, Dr. Elango added.

But civil infrastructure should be now fashioned in such a way as to discourage the breeding of any sort of insect, says P.Kuganantham, public health expert. He adds that town planners have to also be public health engineers so that the planning for the future ensures that healthy living is also factored in. Town planners like the CMDA and the local civic body's engineers should ensure that houses have overhead tanks, septic tanks and sewer lines that are hermetically sealed before they grant permits. House owners should also be informed of this so that they incorporate it into the design.

“When you build a house, check that water does not stagnate in pools anywhere because of elevation and that drains and pipelines have flows that are not disrupted,” he says. Another problem in metros and towns is that unauthorised constructions that do not have regular sewer connections connect their sewage to the stormwater drains. It is estimated that there are over two lakh such illegal connections in Chennai alone, Dr. Kuganantham says. The sewage will cause blocks in SWDs and disrupt water flow, leading to breeding of mosquitoes.

Questions are also being raised by environment campaigners of petroleum-based products that are used in insecticides and other mosquito-battling substances being used by civic bodies. These pollute the environment and worse, mosquitoes have developed resistance to this sort of sprays, fogging and larvicides. Efforts are now on to use bio products.

The better thing, obviously, is prevention. It is better to prevent vectors from breeding, rather than fight them after allowing them to proliferate. Dr. Elango adds, “The best part is that you are the best agent of that change - all you have to do is take care of your own home and backyard.”

Last Updated on Friday, 23 April 2010 04:41
 

People block waste dumping

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The Hindu 22.04.2010

People block waste dumping

Staff Reporter

ERODE: Over 100 residents of three villages laid siege to vehicles of Soorampatti municipal administration near here on Tuesday in protest against the dumping of garbage in their area.

People living in Puthuvalasu, Thottipalayam and Muthampalayam gathered near the site acquired by the municipality for the dumping of garbage and blocked the vehicles. They said that the continuous dumping of garbage would severely damage the environment in their area. A majority of the people in the three villagers were depending on agriculture for their income. “If the natural resources in the area get polluted, we would have to leave the profession of agriculture,” they feared.

Earlier, officials had promised them that they would initiate steps to protect the environment.

“But the officials had failed to fulfil their promise,” people alleged.

Last Updated on Thursday, 22 April 2010 06:39
 


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