Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Workers demand safety, better wages

- Abhinav Rajput abhinav@hindustant­imes.com

People often don’t let us in their house. We should be given handheld devices through which we could issue challans to people who do not allow us to check their homes.

It is 9 ‘o’ clock in the morning and the downpour has just got heavier. Sunil, a domestic breeding checker (DBC), dressed in a maroon T-shirt that he got as a uniform, stands outside a malaria office in Mehrauli.

He constantly looks at his bag in which he is carrying a tablet given by the South Delhi Municipal Corporatio­n. The South corporatio­n had recently launched an applicatio­n named VBDC (vector-borne disease control) and given 200 tablets to breeding checkers so that senior officials can track their visits in different areas.

After getting his attendance registered, Sunil leaves for Kishangarh village, which is about three kilometres from the office. Juggling with a torch and the tablet as he check the cooler of one Shyam Kumar in the village, he asks, “Why don’t you flush out the water, I reminded you last time too.”

“We are still new to the technology, so it is difficult for us to check more than 35 houses a day,” says Sunil, who has been given the task to check breeding of mosquitoes in 50 houses everyday. “We do not mind using a tablet, but there are greater concerns that needs to be addressed first,” he says.

Sunil says while he doesn’t mind using the new technology, he is concerned about the lack of insurance cover if he meets with an accident. “The breeding checkers have to work in dangerous circumstan­ces like climbing the rooftops to check for breeding in water tanks,” he said.

“There has been several incidents when people fell from rooftops, but the corporatio­n didn’t pay for their treatment. We had to pool in money,” Sunil said.

Like Sunil, most of the DBC workers said that the corporatio­n is busy promoting technology, but has been ignoring the basic facilities they need.

Several workers said residents, especially those living in gated colonies, do not allow them to enter their homes. There had also been reports of them being beaten up. The DBCs cannot issue challans. Breeding checker Surender Sharma said they sometimes get beaten up for challaning people. “Some threaten us with connection­s,” he said.

Sharma too reiterated that checking around 50 houses a day is difficult. “We have to check around 50 houses everyday, which is a difficult task. It would have been better if more people were employed.”

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