The Hindu 22.12.2014
‘Zero waste management centres should solve garbage crisis’
The main reason for withdrawing garbage containers is to
induce people to segregate garbage into wet waste and dry waste and
hand it over to garbage collecting personnel accordingly. Earlier,
residents would dump unsegregated garbage in containers and sometimes
all around it, irrespective of whether the container was filled or not.
Shopkeepers complain
There
are many other reasons for withdrawing containers. People, particularly
shopkeepers, quarrel with the Corporation staff over the placing of the
containers. At many places, including Bengaluru and Mysuru, people had
brought pressure on civic bodies to shift the containers.
Shopkeepers
felt that placing garbage containers near their shop would discourage
customers from coming into their shops. Certain corporations and town
municipalities have no definite period of clearing garbage from
containers, result in overflowing garbage in containers. C.G.
Betsurmath, Commissioner of Mysore City Corporation, told
The Hindu
here today that the corporation had set up nine zero-waste management
centres and of them eight have already been functioning in the city. The
nine centres would cover almost entire city.
If
needed, the corporation would set up few more such centres, he said,
adding that there would be no need to place garbage containers in
streets and residential areas once these centres are up and running.