I saw this film recently, A Royal Affair, set in eighteenth century Denmark, and based on
real events during the reign of Christian VII. Across Europe, there were
changes in people’s ideas about religion, science and civil rights. There was
talk of peasants or ‘serfs’ actually having rights, like the right to not be
tortured. There was talk of vaccination. And yet, the streets of Copenhagen
apparently stank.
The royal council – comprised mostly of the nobility, mostly
men with inherited property and titles – did not want to spend on citizen babies
getting vaccinated. It took a lot to ensure routine garbage collection.
That was not the only nation where people thought public
sanitation was a luxury they could opt out of. As late as 1910, in France,
there was resistance to building a sewage system. Property owners, or so I’ve
read, preferred to clog the streets with filth rather than pay to install new
sewage pipes. It was bureaucrats who worked hard to create a decent sewage
system. Someone has remarked that the streets could have been cleaned in ten
years, but it took a hundred years because the educated, middle and upper class
would not cooperate.
Now here we are, over two hundred years later, trying to
figure out what to do with our endless tonnage of garbage and sewage. More and
more paper and plastics are used as packaging material. More and more waste, much
of it generated by the upper classes. Yet, most housing societies and
commercial establishments do not invest in segregation or recycling.
The municipality in Bangalore has finally made segregation
of garbage mandatory for homes and commercial establishments, starting October
this year. But Bangalore’s hotels were opposed to the move. They thought it was not
‘feasible’, which is not true. It would only require separate bins and just a
teeny bit of consideration.
They did say that garbage collectors would mix up segregated
garbage, which is a real concern. Collectors aren’t trained properly in
recycling and composting; the benefits are not clear to them. Hence, the Delhi
High Court had to issue a contempt notice against the municipality’s sanitation
department in Delhi for poor waste management. All the wet and dry waste collected
was being mixed together again when it went into the landfill.
In Mumbai, there have been some feeble attempts. The
Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation warned housing societies that they have to
either start segregating garbage or pay fines. I don’t know how many were
actually fined, but as far as I can tell, dustbins on the streets overflow with
a mixed mess of glass, plastic and food. Which can only mean that either households
are refusing to segregate waste, or that collectors don’t have separate bins
and separate trucks for transporting wet and dry waste to different
destinations.
It’s not so hard to do. I know that some residential areas
in Pune had made it compulsory to keep wet and dry waste in separate bins. When
the collector arrived in the morning, he brought two bins and that made his
sorting task simpler. It also made it easier to convert waste into organic
manure. There is no reason why segregation should not be mandatory in every
town. Every housing society could have its own garden with its own
manure-production unit. It could lead to an income for more people.
For once, the municipal authorities are trying to do the
right thing. Perhaps they aren’t succeeding but the citizens – especially those
who can afford dustbins – are equally responsible. We can clean up our streets in
ten years, or we can take a hundred. Or we can wait for an epidemic.
First published here.
1 comment:
wow. thats such a nice write-up about a much needed awareness.
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