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Solid Waste Management

Puppet shows to generate awareness on waste management

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Source : The Hindu Date : 26.06.2009

Puppet shows to generate awareness on waste management

Special Correspondent

COIMBATORE: The Coimbatore Corporation is of the view that unless it innovates, its efforts to sensitise the public to segregation of waste at source may not succeed. Apart from providing stickers with guidelines on segregation of waste at source and taking out rallies, the Corporation will conduct street plays and puppet shows as part of the sensitisation efforts.

The Corporation says its Rs.96-crore Integrated Solid Waste Management Scheme will be successful only if people stored biodegradable and non-biodegradable waste in separate bins and handed these over to the civic body’s conservancy workers every day.

For this, the people must be provided with enough guidance on segregation and educated on how important it is for the success of the entire scheme.

The puppet shows began in the city on Wednesday. A couple of these were held in Corporation schools to sensitise the students and in Ward 25 for the general public. Ward 25 is among the nine chosen to implement a pilot project in segregation.

Artistes from Green Mother Trust staged a puppet show on segregation and storing of biodegradable and non-biodegradable waste in separate bins. The Corporation said the trust was into using various methods, including street plays and puppet shows, to generate awareness on environment protection. The Corporation had engaged it to carry to all sections in the city the message on the importance of segregation of waste at source.

Watching the show at Ward 25, Collector P. Umanath said this was a very innovative way to take the message to the people.

The Collector told the public in the ward that there was nothing mysterious about segregation of waste.

He pointed out that for ages, people had been storing waste in some form or the other in their house and dumped it outside later. Now, there should be a more scientific method of storing the biodegradable and non-biodegradable waste in separate bins.

Segregation would go a long way in helping the Corporation implement its solid waste management project successfully, the Collector stressed.

Last Updated on Friday, 26 June 2009 09:46
 

Creating a strong base for waste segregation

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Source : The Hindu Date : 22.06.2009

Creating a strong base for waste segregation

K.V. Prasad

Nine wards chosen to implement waste disposal measures


VALUABLE TIPS: Mayor R. Venkatachalam (second right) educates people in Ward 43 on segregation of waste.

COIMBATORE: The Coimbatore Corporation is into creating a strong base on which it can establish a system for successful segregation of waste at source (at the place of generation, namely houses or commercial establishments).

After a decade-long groping for a solution for disposal of garbage, the Corporation seems to be coming from the right direction: from the grassroots to the grandiose. It has plans to convert garbage into manure. A grander plan is to create a park over a landfill of non-biodegradable waste. But, the first task is to make the public segregate waste and store it in bins at home than throw it on the road.

Nine wards have been chosen to implement segregation of waste and the success will turn them into model zones for the rest of the city to emulate.

From the Mayor to the Councillor and from the Commissioner to the conservancy worker, the Corporation machinery is focussing on educating the public on storing biodegradable waste in green bins and the non-biodegradable waste in white bins. They are also being told that they should hand over garbage only to the conservancy workers every day.

Mayor R. Venkatachalam demonstrated segregation at Ward 43 recently in addition to the Corporation distributing the stickers with guidelines on segregation.

The ward itself seems to have prepared a plan of action over the last two years on how to set about segregation and also primary collection.

“We identified areas where bins could be placed along roads and prepared a list of streets, their length and also the number of houses and population. We are working on forming a ward committee to oversee segregation,” ward councillor N. Tamilselvi says. Every house, tea stall, hotel, marriage hall, liquor shop and other establishments that generate garbage are in the list.

“We were the first to prepare such an action plan and submit it to Corporation Commissioner Anshul Mishra. Corrections and improvements were made to it and similar plans were worked out for the other eight wards also,” she claims.

The aim is to make garbage collection easy for the workers also. Ground floor houses will be allocated to older workers as they may not be able to climb the stairs. Ward 43 is among the nine model wards that have a list of available and required manpower and also the availability of equipment for garbage collection.

Last Updated on Monday, 22 June 2009 04:48
 

Plan to tackle Ooty’s waste

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Source : The Hindu Date : 12.06.2009

Plan to tackle Ooty’s waste

Special Correspondent

Udhagamandalam: With the civic administration according high priority to garbage management, waste-related problems are expected to come down steadily over the coming months, according to the Municipal Chairman R. Rajendran.

Scheme

Speaking to ‘The Hindu’ here on Thursday, he said that the municipality was in the process of providing both short and long term solutions. Stating that a major plan of action with private sector participation was in the process of being put in place, he said that the comprehensive solid waste management scheme was expected to be implemented at an estimated cost of Rs. 25 crore. Work on the project, which will be taken up on a Build, Operate and Transfer basis was expected to be completed by the end of 2010.

Last Updated on Friday, 12 June 2009 11:17
 


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