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Public Health / Sanitation

Adulteration: raids in Coimbatore, Tirupur

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The Hindu 23.02.2010

Adulteration: raids in Coimbatore, Tirupur

Special Correspondent

Products that passed their expiry date seized in Tirupur

COIMBATORE: Teams from the Department of Public Health and the City Health Department of the Coimbatore Corporation carried out raids on tea stalls and tea stockists in the city and rural areas as part of a State-wide crackdown on adulteration.

Led by Deputy Director of Health Services S. Senthilkumar, health officials raided these establishments in the suburbs and rural areas. They seized 270 kg of tea valued at Rs.120 a kg. The official said 20 samples would be sent to King Institute at Guindy in Chennai for tests. If the adulteration was proved, charges would be pressed against the stalls or stockists, he said.

The City Health Department’s teams carried out raids within the Coimbatore Corporation limits and found that two brands of tea were mixed in order to provide colour and taste.

Assistant City Health Officer said that inquiries with tea stalls revealed that one brand was known for its colour and the other for taste. Both brands of the dust tea were mixed to provide both these qualities. Most tea stalls said they resorted to this practice. The health wing was trying to find out whether even one of these brands was adulterated.

In Tirupur

The Corporation health officials seized about 100 kg of tea dust, wheat flour and ragi flour, which passed their expiry date, as well as tea dust suspected to be adulterated, in raids in shops on Monday evening. City Health Officer K. R. Jawaharlal said that the products that crossed the expiry date were seized from five shops out of the 40 shops raided.

“We have served show-cause notices on shops, before imposing fines on them,” he added. The raid was conducted based on widespread complaints from specific areas regarding the quality of food products sold.

Dr. Jawaharlal said that tea samples from two shops were lifted after it was suspected to be adulterated.

“We have sent them immediately to government-run laboratories in Chennai for confirmation,” he added.

The health officials also served a notice on a big grocery situated along Tirupur-Mangalam road after it was noticed that the show owner kept wheat flour in open gunny bags in its store house without taking any precaution against rat infestation.

Last Updated on Tuesday, 23 February 2010 02:17
 

Coast cries for facelift beyond Marina

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Deccan Chronicle 20.02.2010

Coast cries for facelift beyond Marina

February 20th, 2010
By DC Correspondent , DC Correspondent

Chennai, Feb. 19: On Independence Day the Marina was declared plastic-free. No longer are disposable cups, plates, bags or even water sachets allowed on the 4.5 km long stretch from Light house to Anna memorial. But, the ban on plastics along the beaches alone cannot work, for the litter strewn along the coastline on the day of Kannum Pongal was close to 60 tonnes.

The entire 12km stretch of beach that runs from opposite the Fort St George to Besant Nagar is considered to be a zero litter zone. “The corporation has banned use of plastic along the Marina. But it has to be banned all along the coast right from Marina to Kottivakkam. The Valmiki nagar beach is a mess actually. The Corporation has not installed enough bins along the coast for the people to dispose of garbage thoughtfully. All the shops along the beach should ban plastics and not the hawkers alone. We will have to penalise people. The corporation vehicles do not turn up everyday to collect the garbage,” says Sharadha Shankar of Save Chennai Beaches campaign (SCBC), a social network group formed by residents of Besant Nagar.

Where the Adyar river meets the ocean near the broken bridge, a lot of Styrofoam, Thermocole pieces and hand bags are strewn causing danger to the environment. “There are also a lot of used of syringes. On a single day we collected around 90 tonnes of garbage near this area,” says Sharadha.

In a recent survey carried out by Reclaim Chennai Beaches Campaign (RCBC) found a total of 20,000 pieces of trash, including 8,500 plastic cups, water sachets and disposable spoons, 1,735 pieces of broken glass and bits of balloons strewn along the 800-metre long Besant Nagar beach. RCBC is a social movement formed by a group of like-minded youth in Besant nagar, which is working along with SCBC,

According to the environmentalists, there is no social responsibility. “It is not just awareness. Beyond that there is no momentum to do anything right. The lack of awareness and lack of political will to run concerted public campaigns to hold the manufacturers accountable for the problematic materials they make like like Styrofoam or plastic that can’t be reused,” says Nityanand Jeyaraman, senior journalist and environmentalist. He says the ban on plastics should be extended to the other beaches also as it is most logical.

According to Ocean Conservancy, which is on a global mission to save global beaches, the garbage along the coast kills more than one million seabirds and 100,000 marine mammals and turtles each year. Only awareness among the people and the social responsibility to protect the environment can save the beaches.

 

Meeting held to tackle mosquito menace

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The Hindu 19.02.2010

Meeting held to tackle mosquito menace

Special Correspondent

CUDDALORE: Collector P. Seetharaman has directed the Municipal Commissioners and the civic bodies to initiate legal action against households that are having permanent puddle of water on their premises and also impose a fine on them.

Presiding over a mosquito menace eradication committee meeting held here on Wednesday, he said mosquitoes seemed to have developed immunity to chemical retardants. The way out is to do away with the breeding places, particularly puddles in the households. The civic bodies should direct such households to clean up the places. If they are not obliging, Sections 84 (1), 86 and 87 (1) of the General Sanitation Act 1939 should be invoked against them, Mr. Seetharaman said.

The civic bodies should also impose a fine of Rs. 500 on the households that defy the direction. However, members pointed out that since new residential colonies were coming up on the periphery of towns, there was an overlapping of jurisdiction between the municipality and the panchayats and, hence, the mosquito menace could not be effectively tackled.

Mr. Seetharaman asked the members to ensure the involvement of panchayat presidents in this endeavour.

Last Updated on Friday, 19 February 2010 02:14
 


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