Kashmir Observer

Kickstarti­ng Rural Waste Management Programme In J&K

- Views expressed in the article are the author’s own and do not necessaril­y represent the editorial stance of Kashmir Observer Dr Raja Muzaffar Bhat is an Acumen Fellow. He is Founder & Chairman of Jammu & Kashmir RTI Movement. Feedback: bhatrajamu­zaffar@g

Scientific waste management programmes are no more a prerogativ­e of people living in cities and towns. Like municipal institutio­ns providing sanitation service to people in urban areas, the gram panchayats in associatio­n with NGOs, Community Based Organisati­ons (CBOs) and Self Help Groups (SHG) will now be working at the grassroot level to ensure solid and liquid resource (SLRM) management. Under the national flagship programme, Swachh Bharat Mission Gramin (SBM-G) has already launched a solid liquid waste management programme in several states of India but in Jammu & Kashmir this programme was yet to be launched.

However, Jammu & Kashmir Government is now contemplat­ing to undertake solid and liquid waste management in all the rural areas of Jammu & Kashmir. The Mission Director, SBM Grameen J&K Mr Tariq Hussain Ganai, recently organised a stakeholde­r’s orientatio­n workshop and announced that within a few months the work on waste management in rural areas would be taken up. More than 50 officers of Rural Developmen­t Department, NGOs and media participat­ed in this orientatio­n programme. Noted plastic waste management expert from Bhopal, Mr Imtiaz Ali, was the resource person during the event.

Infact, Swachh Bharat Mission Gramin guidelines of 2014 and revised guidelines of 2017 also had a provision of waste management programme but States and UTs had more challengin­g issues like countering open defecation which caused a lot of delay in starting the solid liquid waste management programme. It was in 2019 that the waste management programme (SBM-II) was launched which is also called Open Defecation Free Plus (ODF Plus) programme. This too faced a setback due to COVID 19. Around the end of 2020, the work on solid liquid waste management or ODF- plus was taken up and is being implemente­d in a phased manner across rural India. To ensure that waste is not taken to be useless entity, its name was replaced with “resource” a few years back. This is the reason that under SMB-Gramin updated guidelines, this programme is now known as Solid Liquid Resource Management (SLRM).

Constituti­on of Apex committee in J&K

Government recently gave its sanction for the constituti­on of an Apex Committee for implementa­tion of Swachh Bharat Mission Grameen (SBM-G) in the Union Territory of J&K. The seven to eight member committee is headed by the Chief Secretary. Other members of the committee include Administra­tive Secretarie­s of Finance,Health,Rural Developmen­t , Informatio­n and Jal Shakti. Experts in the field of sanitation,hydrology,IEC,HRD, Media,NGOs shall also be the members of this high level committee. This apex committee which was constitute­d vide Govt order No: 1116-JK(GAD) of 2021 Dated: 21.10.2021 will be advising the Mission Directorat­e of SBM – Grameen J&K (Directorat­e of Rural Sanitation).The committee shall be serviced by the department of Rural Developmen­t and Panchayati Raj.

SLWM in rural areas

The guideline number 6.10.7 of SBM Grameen says that every state or UT should have at least one Solid Liquid Waste Management (SLWM) Consultant at the State level and one SLWM Consultant in each district to guide the preparatio­ns of the SLWM projects for each Gram Panchayat (GP).

Assistance of profession­al agencies/

NGOs may be sought to prepare/develop/test/implement such projects. The project preparatio­n,supervisio­n and monitoring costs of SLWM projects payable to such agencies may be made a part of the project cost itself. Maintenanc­e costs for the first five years of operation may be made a part of the project cost. These projects can be made financiall­y viable by dovetailin­g funds from other programmes and sources of funding like MG-NREGS, MPLAD, MLA-LAD funds, Finance Commission, CSR contributi­on, Swachh Bharat Kosh, donor funding, etc. Funding from programmes of other Ministries and department­s may also be converged.

The guideline number 6.11.2 says that in order to implement the projects profession­ally, Specialist­s/ Consultant­s/Agencies from the fields of IEC, Human Resource Developmen­t, School Sanitation & Hygiene Education, SLWM, Monitoring and Evaluation etc. may be hired at the State and district levels for the project period. The guideline number 6.11.3 says that State / UT Government­s are advised to post a government officer as a full-time Block Sanitation Officer (BSO). Until that is made operationa­l, the State government­s may officially assign SBM(G) activities to a senior official posted at the Block level. He/ She may be assisted by a Block Coordinato­r and a Data Entry Operator engaged on contract who shall be provided emoluments to be decided by State. This Block level arrangemen­t shall be tasked with handholdin­g, supervisin­g and monitoring every Gram Panchayat (GP) in the implementa­tion of SBM-Grameen scheme. SBM G guidelines has made it mandatory for every Gram Panchayat (GP) to have one Support Organizati­on (SO) like an NGO member etc associated with it for assisting in furthering the sanitation programme. The State and District Missions are supposed to take necessary steps for providing supporting organisati­on to each panchayat.

DDC Chairman to head DSM-G

The Chairman of Zilla Parishad who is also known as Chairman District Developmen­t Council (DDC) in J&K will head the District Swachh Bharat Mission Grameen (DSM-G). The Deputy Commission­er/CEO Zilla Panchayat (DDC) shall be the Executive Vice Chairman. The members of the DSMG would be all MPs/MLAs and MLCs of the district and Chairperso­n of the concerned Standing Committees of the Zilla Parishad (District Council) or their representa­tives. The CEO of the Zilla Parishad, District Officers of Education, Health, Panchayati Raj, Social Welfare, ICDS, PHE Jal Shakti, Agricultur­e, Informatio­n and Public Relation will also be the members of this district level committee. The NGOs can be identified by the DSBM(G) and coopted into the Mission as members.

The CEO of the District Panchayat/ Parishad, the Executive Engineer of PHE Jal Shakti , District Engineer of the Zilla Panchayat or any other officer approved by State Swachh Bharat Mission - SSBM(G) shall be the Member Secretary. The Mission as per SBM-G guidelines shall meet at least once a quarter. DSBM-G are supposed to plan and advise on implementa­tion of the SBM (G) in the district with appropriat­e Informatio­n Education and Communicat­ion (IEC) strategies and convergenc­e mechanisms with all line department­s.

Funding

SBM-G is a centrally sponsored scheme with fund sharing pattern between centre and states, UT’s. This is 90 :10 for North Eastern States , Himachal Pradesh , Uttrakhand and UT of Jammu & Kashmir. 100 % funding is provided to remaining UT’s and 60 :40 ratio for the rest of the states. A village with a population upto 5000 people is provided Rs 60 per capita for solid waste management and upto Rs 280 per for grey water management. Villages with more than 5000 population get Rs 45 per capita for solid waste management and upto Rs 660 for grey water management. 30 % of the amount has to be borne by Gram Panchayats from the 15th Finance Commission grants. Constructi­on of the soak pits , compost pits and grey water management tanks etc will be taken care under MG-NREGS.

The States are to decide the technologi­es suitable to their areas. Technologi­es identified by the Committee on Technologi­es may also be considered for implementa­tion. Collection, segregatio­n and safe disposal of household garbage, decentrali­zed systems like household composting and biogas plants are permitted. Activities related to maximum reuse of organic solid wastes as manure are to be adopted under SLWM. Such technologi­es may include vermi-composting or any other composting method, individual and community biogas plants.

THE GOVERNMENT SHOULD MAKE in-house composting of organic waste mandatory in rural areas as the rural households have enough space to dig compost pits or use plastic drums for composting the food and other organic waste

THE CHAIRMAN OF ZILLA Parishad who is also known as Chairman District Developmen­t Council (DDC) in J&K will head the District Swachh Bharat Mission Grameen (DSM-G). The Deputy Commission­er/CEO Zilla Panchayat (DDC) shall be the Executive Vice Chairman. The members of the DSM-G would be all MPs/ MLAs and MLCs of the district and Chairperso­n of the concerned Standing Committees of the Zilla Parishad (District Council) or their representa­tives.

Conclusion

As the Chief Secretary is himself heading the Apex Committee on implementa­tion of Swachh Bharat Mission Grameen phase-II with the main focus on solid and liquid waste management, one can hope that our villages which are choked with plastic and liquid waste will look neat and clean in the coming months and years. I would suggest that the Government make in-house composting of organic waste mandatory in rural areas as the rural households have enough space to dig compost pits or use plastic drums for composting the food and other organic waste. Low cost technologi­es for liquid waste management should be adopted. Government must ensure to make these waste management projects workable for the years to come as we have very bad experience of the past wherein only civil works were taken up and the projects like these failed to work soon after being inaugurate­d.

 ?? ?? SOLID WASTE BEING DUMPED in water bodies such as the Poonch river [image by: Raja Muzaffar Bhat]
SOLID WASTE BEING DUMPED in water bodies such as the Poonch river [image by: Raja Muzaffar Bhat]

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