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Public Health / Sanitation

From waste picker to entrepreneur, she has come a long way

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The Hindu      28.02.2017  

From waste picker to entrepreneur, she has come a long way

Phenomenal riseAnnamma has established herself as an entrepreneur, in the very sector that her grandmother eked out a living.Special Arrangement  

Annamma, the first rag picker to buy truck for door-to-door collection of dry waste in Bengaluru, runs a successful business

She was a 10-year-old girl when she started following her grandmother as she picked up waste from the city’s streets.

Thirty years later, Annamma has established herself as an entrepreneur in the very sector that her grandmother eked out a living.

She has become the first waste picker to buy a truck for door-to-door collection of dry waste in the city, and is already looking to purchase a second vehicle in the near future.

For somebody who was still picking waste from the streets even in 2013, Annamma’s rise is nothing less than phenomenal.

“When the civic body wanted waste pickers to start manning dry waste collection centres (DWCC), I was not confident to take up the task. I lived in a hut with no electricity and had saved Rs. 50,000 to build a house. But I invested the money and started a DWCC. This centre has grown into a business today,” she said, beaming with pride.

She has been running the DWCC for ward 101, Kamakshipalya for four years now, and it’s a far cry from her earlier life. Money was scarce when she used to scrounge the streets for waste. But at the DWCC, she now deals with nearly two tonnes of dry waste every day.

House of her own

She was able to take a loan to build a three bedroom house in Ullal Upanagar, where her hut once stood.

“My daughters used to read sitting under a street light or read all night on the new moon day, as there was no electricity. Today they have a study room,” said Annamma.

In a recent move, Bruhat Bangalore Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) has given the responsibility of door-step collection of dry waste twice a week to DWCCs mostly run by former waste pickers in their respective wards. This entails expansion of DWCC operations and capital investments on vehicle and men.

Annamma, who is one of the more successful people in the sector, acted decisively and purchased a truck start door-step collection of waste.

“I don’t know how to read or write. But I am good at Math because of the business that I run.

“These are tough times as the prices for plastic and paper waste have fallen. So the only way to survive is to increase the volume which is what I expect will happen with door-step collection,” Annamma explained her strategy.

Nalini Shekhar of the NGO Hasirudala, who has been working with Annamma for the past four years, said that it is a challenge for people like Annamma to become entrepreneurs as the waste sector run by former ragpickers is not being considered as an industry by banks.

“For the truck Annamma has gone for a vehicle loan with 18% interest, which we are looking to be taken over by some institution with a lower interest rate,” she said.

Annamma is worried about the cost of expansion and the need to hire more people.

“We presently need six men to run the show. But we have employed only four as my husband and I, work in the centre saving us the cost of two men,” she said.

 

Untreated sewage let into Phalguni

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The Hindu         28.02.2017 

Untreated sewage let into Phalguni

Polluted:Sewage from the sewage pumping station flows into the Pachchanadi rivulet at Pachchanadi, which later joins the Phalguni ahead of Malavoor vented dam.Anil Kumar Sastry  

Waste collected at the corporation’s Pachchanadi treatment plant is let into the adjoining stream

The Mangaluru City Corporation has been discharging untreated sewage into the Phalguni (Gurupura).

Sewage collected at its Pachchanadi sewage treatment plant is being let into the Pachchanadi Thodu (stream) away from public glare. The plant can treat 8.75 million litres of sewage per day.

The stream later joins the Phalguni ahead of the Malavoor vented dam built under a multi-village drinking water scheme for 12 surrounding villages.

When The Hindu ventured to trace the source of water contamination, it found that sewage was being let out from the Pachchanadi plant to the stream located off Moodushedde- Bondel Road.

Foul smell

The water, which used to be crystal clear, had turned blackish emanating a foul smell.

Moodushedde Gram Panchayat president Hariprasad Shetty told The Hindu that MCC was told about this issue but no action was taken.

He also claimed that during power failure, sewage was let into the stream for a long time.

Mayor Harinath, however, attempted to defend the civic body, claiming that sewage would have been let out only once in a while. When he was pointed the reality, the Mayor said he would immediately take action. The treatment plant is operated by a contractor and the MCC only oversees the work, he claimed.

The Karnataka State Pollution Control Board’s Environment Officer Rajashekar Puranik told The Hindu that the board had already issued notices to Mangaluru City Corporation Commissioner.

The sewage treatment plant (STP) has become non-functional for about two months, and would be restored in about a week, he said.

Meanwhile, personnel, managing the drinking water scheme, said that as of now, water quality at the dam has not deteriorated. However, the contamination would increase when the water levels recede, they said.

The project, catering to about 52,000 residents, is on trial run, they said.

Other places too

Sewage, reportedly, is being let out to the Pahlguni from other places too, including Gurupura town, Baikampady Industrial Area and areas abutting the river in the city. Sewage is let out into drains which later join the river thereby contaminating the water. A few days ago, several fish in the river had died near Kenjar village following reduced oxygen levels.

 

35 urban local bodies to be ODF soon

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The Hindu       24.02.2017 

35 urban local bodies to be ODF soon

Open defecation in TS is 8.38 %, national average is 12.6 %

With the Government setting up a stiff deadline of making all the urban areas Open Defecation Free (ODF) in the next few months, some municipal bodies are to cross the goal-line this month itself. About 35 urban local bodies across the State out of the 72 are to be declared ODF soon.

Commissioner and Director of Municipal Administration T.K. Sreedevi said that rest of urban local bodies (ULBs) would be ODF before the Telangana Formation Day of June 2 as an action plan has been set in place for completing toilet construction including conversion of insanitary toilets.

“Half the population of Telangana lives in urban areas and there is an imperative need to make provision for toilets as open defecation - whether due to lack of awareness or attitudinal issues, is an obvious health hazard causing several communicable diseases and stunted growth among children. It also pollutes surrounding water bodies and air,” she pointed out.

Open defecation in Telangana urban is 8.38 % as compared to the national average of 12.6 %. Of the target of 1.64 lakh individual toilets and conversion of 52,567 insanitary ones; 69,613 and 6,178, respectively, have been completed. For public toilets, the target of 3,602, 2484 were done while for community toilets 1032 of 1297 were done.

About 12 ULBs are already ODF - Huzurabad, Jagityal, Huzurnagar, Suryapet, Gajwel, Siddipet, Madhira, Sattupalli, Achampet, Shadnagar, Bhongir and Ibrahimpatnam. About 18 are under the pipeline of doing so as works are in different stages and nine more are in the finishing stage.

Among these are - Korutla, Badangpet, Medchal, Boduppal, Peerzadiguda, Jalpally, Meerpet, Pedda Amberpet, Narsampet, Husnabad, Vemulavada, Kalwakurthy, Metpalli, Sadasivapet, Sircilla, Jilleguda and Nagarkurnool.

Ten best performing in remaining ULBs are: Armoor, Dubbaka, Bhainsa, Peddapallim Kollapur, Wanaparty, Manuguru, Mandamarri, Mancherial, Miryalguda. Bottom 10 are: Kamareddy, Khammam, Ramagundam, Warangal, Nirmal, Mahbubabad, Mahabubnagar, Nizamabad, Vikarabad and Andol-Jogipet.

Earlier, addressing a gathering of municipal officers, women self-help groups, sanitary workers and others at a one-day workshop to sensitise stakeholders on the mission, Dr. Sreedevi wanted municipal commissioners to ensure toilets are constructed, sanitation is maintained and there are no encroachments as it would lead to investments.

The Minister for Municipal Administration, K.T. Rama Rao, was very particular about the completion of the project within the time frame decided.

Commissioners were also told to tone up their websites and make them dynamic.

 


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