Deccan Chronicle

Toilets lie dark with no water

- S.N.C.N. ACHARYULU I DC

Having declared all urban bodies as open defecation free, the government has a big task in maintainin­g toilets.

In Hyderabad itself, the maintenanc­e of public toilets is poor and some of them were closed within a month of opening. In once such instance, the GHMC constructe­d a public toilet near Patny crossroads, Secunderab­ad, a few months back. Due to lack of proper maintenanc­e, it was removed.

In many towns, public toilets do not have ensured water supply, and cleaning amount. In some towns, the public toilets closed by 10 pm. Even in GHMC limits, the public toilets, including those located on busy stretches, are closed by 11 pm.

The public toilet on the busy Osmangunj stretch winds up business by 10.30 pm. This is the only public toilet on the stretch from Abids to Afgalganj. At the Bahadurpur­a Road, Basheerbag­h, Abids and Koti the public toilets are locked by 11 pm.

“People prefer public toilets which has staff to maintain them as they are cleaner. In a city where people work during the night and return home early in the morning, there should be proper toilets open,” said Mr N. Ashish, who works in an IT company.

A few people venture to use unmanned public toilets for fear of being attacked by anti-social elements. “Even if it is open at night no one will use it as there are neither lights nor water,” said Mr Rajendar Goud, a businessma­n.

As a part of Swachh Bharat Mission, the state government constructe­d 1,42,216 toilets — individual, public, community and She toilets in urban local bodies. A total of `156.48 crore was spent on building toilets, the Centre paying `55.42 crore and the state government `101.06 crore.

General cleaning should be carried out daily and should follow a systematic approach, it was stated. Toilets should be cleaned during the off-peak hours on a weekly, fortnightl­y or monthly basis.

Director, municipal administra­tion, T.K. Sreedevi said the public toilets were being given to private agencies in some municipali­ties.

She told this newspaper that in other towns the local municipal corporatio­n was looking after public toilets. She said the lack of proper maintenanc­e would be viewed seriously.

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