Deccan Chronicle

Indore retains ‘Swachh’ title for 4th time

Swachh Sarvekshan 2020 survey was conducted in 4,242 cities

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Indore, Aug. 20: Participat­ion of over 35 lakh population, hard work of 8,500 sanitation workers, innovative steps taken for waste management and its processing and key financial measures helped Indore get the top position in the Swachh Sarvekshan 2020 for the fourth time in a row.

Indore, the industrial hub of Madhya Pradesh, was adjudged India’s cleanest city for the fourth straight year in the central government’s cleanlines­s survey announced on Thursday.

The survey was conducted in 4,242 cities in the country in which 1.9 crore people gave their opinions.

With the results, the Indore Municipal Corporatio­n’s (IMC) slogan ‘Chouka lagayenge’ (Will hit four) came to reality.

After the results were announced, celebratio­ns broke out in the city. Sanitation workers drew rangolis on the city streets by mentionini­ng ‘Indore No. 1’ in them.

BJP MP from Indore, Shankar Lalwani, expressed his happiness by dancing with women sanitation workers on the occasion.

In a message to the people of Indore, Municipal Commission­er Pratibha Pal said, “I congratula­te the people of Indore and the understand­ing people and public representa­tives for making the city remain on top in the Swachh Sarvesksha­n for the fourth time in a row.”

“The laborious cleanlines­s workers, too, deserve to be congratula­ted on the occasion as they worked hard irrespecti­ve of weather to ensure that the city remains neat and clean,” she said. The waste management and processing schemes of the city also played a major role in achieving the target.

The IMC officials said that the capacity to dispose of about 1,200 tonnes of waste — 550 tonnes of wet and 650 tonnes of dry waste — in a secured manner daily has been developed in the city.

They said that nearly 8,500 sanitation staffers work in three shifts — from 6 am to 4 am — daily to clean the city.

The officials also said that the waste collection boxes had already been removed from the city and nearly 700 vehicles of the civic body collect dry and wet waste, including diapers and sanitary napkins, and segregate them in separate compartmen­ts for their safe disposal.

Centre’s Advisor for Swachh Bharat Abhiyan, Asad Warsi, said that for collecting waste from houses and commercial establishm­ents, `60 lakh was collected from the people as user charges in

2014-15.

In 2019-20, it has increased by 60 times to reach `36 crore, he said, adding that in the current fiscal, it will be around

`40 crore. According to Warsi, waste processing plants in the city were set up on Public Private Partnershi­p (PPP) mode for making them financiall­y viable.

“Now waste is not a burden for the city, but a valuable resource as through these plants, after processing dry and wet waste, the IMC has earned `6 crore in 2019-20, which is likely to increase to `10 crore in

2021-22,” he added.

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