Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

City Beautiful misses place in Top 10 again, but climbs ladder by 4 spots

NO LESSON LEARNT Poor show in waste management restricts Chandigarh to 16th rank LONG ROAD Mohali only dropped further from last year’s 153rd to 157th place this year STEADY RISE Panchkula has improved consistent­ly for 4 years, but is still at 56th spot

- Munieshwer A Sagar

CHANDIGARH : The City Beautiful failed to make it to the top 10 cleanest cities in the country for the second year in a row, but improved its ranking from last year’s 20 to 16 in the latest Swachh Survekshan rankings announced on Thursday.

Chandigarh was also adjudged the “Best State Capital/union Territory” in citizens’ feedback.

It was in 2018 last when Chandigarh was ranked among the top 10 cities – the third cleanest. The good run ended with UT dropping to the 20th position in last year’s rankings.

Indore in Madhya Pradesh continued to reign as the country’s cleanest city (having population of more than 1 lakh). Surat in Gujarat, which was ranked 14 last year, jumped to the second position.

Navi Mumbai in Maharashtr­a climbed to the third position from last year’s seventh.

Indore scored 94.12% (5,647.56 out of 6,000), while Chandigarh got 82.83% (4,970), improving from 2019’s score of 75.74%.

The Swachh Survekshan is conducted to study the progress of Swachh Bharat Mission (Urban) and rank cities based on cleanlines­s and sanitation parameters.

Four parameters were used for arriving at the overall ranking of a city – certificat­ions (1,500), direct observatio­n (1,500), service level progress (1,500) and citizen feedback (1,500).

A MAJOR FACTOR IN THE CITY’S CLIMB FROM 20TH TO 16TH POSITION WAS IT DOUBLING ITS SCORE IN THE CERTIFICAT­IONS PARAMETER

WHAT PUSHED CITY UP?

A major factor in the city’s climb from 20th to 16th position was it doubling its score in the certificat­ions parameter.

There are two categories under this parameter - garbage free cities (GFC) star certificat­ion and open defecation free (ODF) certificat­ion.

It achieved ODF++ from the earlier ODF ranking. Similarly, it gained 3-Star GFC status against the previous 2-Star GFC. Consequent­ly, it improved its score from 40% marks last year to 73.33% this year in the certificat­ion category.

Had the city got the 5-Star GFC certificat­ion, which it had applied for, it would have broken into the top 10 list. But, its claim was downgraded to a mere 3-Star rating.

WHAT’S HOLDING CITY BACK

Municipal corporatio­n’s poor solid waste management, particular­ly waste segregatio­n and disposal, led to continued poor showing of country’s first planned city in the 2020 rankings.

This was reflected in city’s marks dropping from 90% last year to 76.33% this year in the service level progress parameter, which is largely indicative of efficiency in solid waste management.

Former Union railway minister and UT member of Parliament Pawan Kumar Bansal said, “According to a report of the Centre for Science and Environmen­t, based on Swatch Bharat Mission inputs, Chandigarh has recorded 90% waste processing, 100% doorto-door garbage collection and 95% waste segregatio­n in 24 of 26 wards. These high claims are not only untrue but border on the ludicrous and bizarre.”

It is shameful that even after spending crores on the segregatio­n and disposal of waste, the Bjp-led MC has failed miserably. DEVINDER SINGH BABLA, Congress leader of opposition in MC

 ?? RAVI KUMAR/HT ?? The legacy waste at Dadumajra dumping ground has remained Chandigarh’s bugbear.
RAVI KUMAR/HT The legacy waste at Dadumajra dumping ground has remained Chandigarh’s bugbear.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India