Urban News

  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size

Corporation to privatise solid waste management in Vellore

Print PDF

The Hindu                       26.03.2013

Corporation to privatise solid waste management in Vellore

Biodegradable vegetable wastes being collected by workers to be taken to the compost shed in the SWM Centre in Gandhinagarof Zone-1.— Photo: D. Gopalakrishnan
Biodegradable vegetable wastes being collected by workers to be taken to the compost shed in the SWM Centre in Gandhinagarof Zone-1.— Photo: D. Gopalakrishnan.

With council approving the decision, tenders will be floated soon.

The Vellore Corporation has decided to privatise solid waste management in the corporation area.

A resolution to this effect was passed at the monthly meeting of the Vellore Corporation Council here on Friday. The decision to privatise SWM was taken after the addition of two municipalities, six town panchayats and nine village panchayats pushing up the number of wards in the Corporation to 60. After the expansion, the Corporation area has increased from 11.65 sq.km to 87.92 sq.km.

“With the Corporation Council passing the resolution approving privatisation of SWM, tenders will soon be called from private agencies to undertake the SWM works,” said Priyamvadha, City Health Officer, Vellore.

While the Corporation generated garbage of 200 tonnes per day as per the 2011 population, the existing garbage vehicles were able to remove only 150 tonnes. The Commissioner of Municipal Administration, Chennai, has in December 2012, approved the Corporation’s proposal to entrust the 715 sanitary workers posts to a private agency.

Model for SWM

The Corporation has decided to make Zone-1 comprising 15 wards in the extension areas of Gandhinagar, Kazhinjur, Virudhambut, Tharapadavedu, Katpadi and Kangeyanallur, as a model for the implementation of SWM project, in pursuance to the direction of the CMA who has asked the Corporation to select a zone for establishing an SWM model. An SWM project is already in place in Gandhinagar, where the office of the erstwhile town panchayat houses a compost yard, and garbage is being regularly collected through carts from the houses and business premises. A similar system is also in place in Kazhinjur. Four places have been identified in Zone 1 for undertaking the work of segregation of wastes and composting the garbage. The existing infrastructure in Katpadi, Gandhinagar, Kazhinjur and Pallikuppam would be modified.

While the Corporation already had six refuse collectors and seven dumper placers, it has placed orders for six more dumper placers and four more refuse collectors for undertaking the garbage collection, removal and dumping work. The model SWM would be ready by April 10, Ms. Priyamvadha said.

Sanitary workers

Meanwhile, the 715 posts of sanitary workers are to be entrusted to the private agency to be selected through tenders. The Corporation would be incurring a sum of Rs. 56.76 lakh per month (Rs. 7.17 crore per annum) on the sanitary workers. This comprised their daily wage at the rate of Rs. 208 per head per day (a total of Rs. 44.61 lakh per month), Employees Provident Fund (Rs. 5.35 lakh), administrative expenses (Rs. 66,924), service charges (Rs. 5.51 lakh), LIC premium (Rs. 71,500), ESI and other benefits (Rs. 2.90 lakh). The Corporation proposed to meet the expenditure from the general funds till a private agency is selected, officials said.

While the Corporation required 576 sanitary workers for undertaking sanitary work in the 48 wards in the upgraded Vellore Corporation before the annexation of neighbouring municipalities, and town and village panchayats, it had only 381 sanitary workers. The shortage of 195 workers was met by enlisting the services of 190 workers from women’s self-help groups (SHGs) on contract basis.

The addition of extension areas comprising two municipalities (Tharapadavedu and Sathuvachari), six town panchayats (Gandhinagar, Kazhinjur, Katpadi, Shenbakkam, Allapuram and Thorapadi) and nine village panchayats (Konavattam, Viruppakshipuram, Alamelumangapuram, Virudhambut, Kangeyanallur, Palavansathu, Idayansathu, Ariyur and Chitheri), has necessitatedemployment of 270 more SHG workers for sanitary work on contract basis.

The upgradation of the Corporation and the functioning of the local body as an integrated Corporation after the extension of new areas with effect from October 25, 2011 had increased the requirement of sanitary workers to 1,450, whereas the Corporation had only 559 workers, leaving a shortage of 891 workers. The Corporation engaged 460 SHG workers at the rate of 10 each from 46 SHGs on contract basis to undertake the additional work in all the four zones, and their contract would be ending on various days this year, the last being October 2, 2013.