Mangalore: Trash Will Earn You Money


Mangalore, Oct 10 (The Hindu): Mangalore City Corporation will start paying people who gather their plastic and glass waste and bring them to recycling centres which are to be set up soon.

Deputy Commissioner V. Ponnuraj said this on the sidelines of a function to launch ‘Nirmala Nagara Abhayana' the cleanliness jatha here on Saturday. It is being undertaken by Sri Ramakrishna College.

Mr. Ponnnuraj said the solid waste collected and brought by citizens to the recycling centres would be paid based on the weight of the refuse, which in turn would be sold to recyclers for a consideration. The corporation would first invest and then recover the value of waste from the recyclers, he said. The corporation would not be looking for profit and would continue to collect glass and plastic waste even if it incurred losses keeping the cause of waste disposal in mind. Mr. Ponnuraj said door-to-door collection of garbage would be made compulsory once the new three-package system was implemented in the city.

Ban on Plastics

He said the centre was about to amend the relevant laws to ban use and sale of plastic of thickness of 40 microns — that is the size of Nandini milk pouch. He said this would be strictly implemented in the district.

Mr. Ponnuraj said the so-called scientific dumping yard at Pachchanadi had failed because it was designed for a mere 120 tonnes of waste a day whereas the city generated much more than that. The present plan was to handle 200 tonnes a day. Construction of an additional scientific dumping yard was in progress, he said.

Earlier, he praised the people of Mangalore who always liked to keep their premises clean. He said they should have similar attitude towards cleanliness outside their premises as well. He urged the students participating in the jatha to ensure that they and their families participated actively in the door-to-door collection of garbage when implemented. He asked the students to make video clippings on their mobile phones of people violating the solid waste disposal rules and pass them on to the authorities so that the guilty could be punished.

Naveen Shetty K., principal of the college, said the jatha was aimed at creating awareness about throwing plastic sachets, plastic bags, cigarette butts and spitting on the roads. The students — some of them wearing hand gloves and armed with bags – collected plastic sachets, bags and papers dumped on the roads. The jatha passed through Jyothi Circle, Hampanakatta, State Bank Circle, and Central Market before coming back to Bunts Hostel Circle.

  

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Comment on this article

  • Maya, Mangalore

    Sun, Oct 17 2010

    Excellent, Mr.Ponnuraj. Hope you and your team are always here in Mangalore and we all with collective effort improve this beautiful city.

    DisAgree Agree [1] Reply Report Abuse

  • Ajay, UK

    Sun, Oct 10 2010

    It is a very good idea. Public will hereby have to play a greater role in recycling which is in infan cy stage in India. In the West we regularly make trip to the recycling centres popularly known as the skip in the UK .There are huge containers for different items like wood,cardboard,metal,house hold wasre,electronic items and seperate small containers for clothes,shoes,bottles and paper. It is a good idea to pay as it might encourage the practice. Mangalore I think is the first city in India to introduce this. All the best to the corporation and hope this practice becomes popular.

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  • Gregory, Ireland

    Sun, Oct 10 2010

    It is so good in our country, that the govt is going to pay to the public, to bring the refuse to the center.in europe, everything is recycled. the garbage is collected charging by weight.the recycling things has to be taken to the center. we public should take care of our city, to keep it clean, so that our children and we adults can breath a fresh air.kindly treat your city as your home.we have to support to keep our city clean. there is no magic. if we dont keep our city clean, then our children not going to learn to do the same.a little bit of cleanliness can go long way. recently some of the pictures shown on media from the cwg games. that brought down the image of all indians. the clean and unclean all are coming under the same umbralla.our country is so beautifull, thank God. but lets keep it clean.lot of foriegners wants come to india, but they are worried about our cleanliness. there is no country like india and it is people. we indians are very polite and we give warm wellcome and we give the best to our guest. when it is for children, we try and educate the in the best school with allways ranks we are expecting from our kids, but we dont care about our street and the filthiness, and the breathing they take inn, we will pay lot of money to kill the mosquitoes, but we will not keep our surroundings clean.it will be good idea to come up with tidy town contest. so that we can have competition, on which town is clean.every town that looks clean should be honoured.

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  • Ln Peter A Pinto MJF, Mangalore

    Sun, Oct 10 2010

    Great step by the district administration and service organisations in creating awarness to school children and public. Your work will continue by some more organisation and schools. God bless Young India !!!!!!!

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  • Sanjay Shetty, Mlore.

    Sun, Oct 10 2010

    Good going bjp .. keep the good work.

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  • Louis D'Souza, Udupi/Kuwait

    Sun, Oct 10 2010

    Don’t ban plastics instead recycle it properly and reuse it. Using paper bags is not a solution to reduce plastic bags consumption! More n more trees have to be cut and all forest will diminish. There is many types of plastic Bags for example: Hi Density , HDPE ( thin T-Shirt, garbage type bags) Low Density, LDPE (Thick with small carry handle & Freezer bags ) also there are P.P. (polypropylene used for chips) these bags have to be segregated before its recycled, else it won’t be reused because of properties, Density & MFI in each type of Polyethylene bags.

    School children must visit nearby plastic factory and must get technical information about plastic bags so that they may teach their parents about segregation. Also nowadays biodegradable compound is available in market to be mixed with plastic bags while extrusion so that the bags will degrade within 6 months. Even Calciun carbonate (Filler)is mixed with plastic to bring down the cost of bags.

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  • Bulsam, Mangalore

    Sun, Oct 10 2010

    I wish that Mangalore City Corporation will also start paying people who gather their dangerous components of computer waste and bring them to E-Waste Recycling Centers.
    Several nations have enacted laws about e-waste to try and keep it out of landfills, or in landfills which are equipped to handle toxic materials. The heavy metals in e-waste such as lead, cadmium, and mercury pose serious environmental and health risks. While many consumers are trained to think of things like cathode ray tubes as dangerous articles that require special disposal, most do not connect cell phones, for example, with beryllium, a toxic heavy metal which can cause severe damage to the lungs. In addition to the toxins it contains, e-waste also takes a very long time to biodegrade, which means that it will be taking up landfill space for centuries.

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  • Jennet Prescilla, Mangalore / Oman

    Sun, Oct 10 2010

    This initiative has already been started by Fr.Felix of Panvel Church and their Green Earth Movement e newsletter is a great help to spread this awareness. I am furnishing hereunder the contact details / further information which may be useful in this connection
    Now you can download the ZERO GARBAGE PowerPoint CD and the GEM E-Newsletters from our website - www.stfrancisxavier.in
    Published by St Xavier’s Community Centre, Panvel,
    Tel: 2745 5556, Email: panvelchurch@rediffmail.com website: stfrancisxavier.in

    Wish you all the best in your endeavour towards a better and cleaner Mangalore our beloved town.

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  • martin, mangalore/mulki

    Sun, Oct 10 2010

    BAN ON PLASTICS BAGS will not solve the problem. How Mr. Ponnuraj suggested this? Insted proper knowledge has been given to public, Put penalty to those put waste on the road.
    who used to clean the Roads few years back? even in mumbai.? COWS.
    AUTHORITIES ban on COWS.and they didnot employ road cleaners. Now see the problems? sewage problems? Dirty city? public will not put plastics if it is harmful to cattles on the road. My opinion is employ road cleaners. AND NOT BAN ON PLASTICS. AND WHY PUBLIC / SCHOOL CHILDREN SHOULD COLLECT AND CLEAN THE ROAD ...THAT TOOO DURING 2010?

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  • Teresa, Mangalore

    Sun, Oct 10 2010

    Excellent step towards keeping our Mangalore clean. Some residents are so lazy,inspite of Garbage bins provided by the Municipality,instead of throwing the garbage in Municipality garbage bins,they throw the garbage not near their house but near others house or beside the road. This shows the selfishness of the people and that too educated people.

    Specially u see the Mannagudda area(Matadakani road). Since the suggestion of taking photographs and give to the Corporation, we will definitely do that and people should be fined. This message should be broadcasted thru mobile vehicles. In Bangalore we have seen Garbage collection vehicles comes every morning with the announcement and residents give their trash immediately or if they are going to work then they leave the same outside their house or compound.Thanks to the corportion of Mangalore for the cleanliness awareness as a result tourism will improve.

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  • Janet D'sa , Mangalore

    Sat, Oct 09 2010

    This is an excellent step taken to keep the city clean. People should also be fined for throwing trash and using road side as toilets. More of awareness should be created.

    DisAgree Agree Reply Report Abuse

  • A.S.Mathew, U.S.A.

    Sat, Oct 09 2010

    Congratulations for this new
    venture to keep the earth clean
    and pollution free.

    If everybody will join in a
    united front to keep our surroundings clean by picking up
    the trash, it will make a great
    revoltuion. When we realize that
    picking trash is not a shameful
    act, then a true revolution has
    started.

    DisAgree Agree Reply Report Abuse


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