Jamaica Gleaner

Household waste is priority, not cuttings – NSWMA

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CHAIRMAN OF the National Solid Waste Management Authority (NSWMA), Dennis Chung, says persons should not leave more than two bags of cuttings for collection and disposal, as household waste is priority for the agency.

According to Chung, during periods when trees are overgrown, households tend to have scores of bags with cuttings for disposal, and it is beyond the NSWMA’s capacity.

He said that type of waste should be used as composting, or disposed of through private arrangemen­ts.

“We just don’t have the capacity to dispose of that sort of thing, and that’s not regular garbage. We have to collect the garbage that is rotting – that is the first priority for us,” Chung said at the recent handover of two compacter trucks to the agency, donated by the Jamaica Social Investment Fund (JSIF), at the Office of the Prime Minister in St Andrew.

The chairman noted that on a recent collection drive, the NSWMA observed 17 bags of cuttings at a home, adding that the cuttings can be turned into compost.

He said that once a person contacts the NSWMA, personnel are available to “carry them through that process”.

Chung also appealed to householde­rs to containeri­se their waste. “When we have to stop and shovel up garbage, it takes at least five times more in terms of productive time to get the job done,” he said.

“Even with [more trucks], if we don’t have our citizens being responsibl­e in how they containeri­se, in how they dispose of garbage, and if we don’t have the proper legislatio­n in place, we will never have enough trucks to collect waste,” Chung said.

The NSWMA policy requires that all solid waste generated from households must be properly containeri­sed before storage and collection. The solid waste should not be in direct contact with the interior of the storage container or receptacle. The use of garbage bags is highly recommende­d.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Chairman of the National Solid Waste Management Authority, Dennis Chung, addresses the recent handover ceremony for two compacter trucks to the agency, donated by the Jamaica Social Investment Fund, at the Office of the Prime Minister in St Andrew.
CONTRIBUTE­D Chairman of the National Solid Waste Management Authority, Dennis Chung, addresses the recent handover ceremony for two compacter trucks to the agency, donated by the Jamaica Social Investment Fund, at the Office of the Prime Minister in St Andrew.

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