Context:
Telangana stood first in the country in the list of highest number of open defecation free (ODF Plus) villages under the Swachh Bharat Mission (Grameen) Phase-II programme till December 31, 2021.
Factors considered in the Household Survey for ODF declaration:
- Access to toilet facility
- 100 per cent usage
- Fly-proofing of toilet
- Safe septage disposal
- Hand-washing before meals
- Hand-washing with soap after defecation
- Availability of soap and water in or near the toilet
Factors considered in the Village Survey for ODF declaration:
- No visible faeces found in the environment/village
- Proper usage of school toilet
- Safe confinement of excreta in school toilet
- Proper usage of anganwadi toilet
- Safe confinement of excreta in anganwadi toilet
About Swachh Bharat Mission (SBM):
- The Swachh Bharat Mission – Urban (SBM-U), launched on 2nd October 2014 aims at making urban India free from open defecation and achieving 100% scientific management of municipal solid waste in 4,041 statutory towns in the country.
The objectives of the mission are mentioned below:
- Elimination of open defecation
- Eradication of Manual Scavenging
- Modern and Scientific Municipal Solid Waste Management
- To effect behavioural change regarding healthy sanitation practices
- Generate awareness about sanitation and its linkage with public health
- Capacity Augmentation for ULB’s
- To create an enabling environment for private sector participation in Capex (capital expenditure) and Opex (operation and maintenance)
The Mission has the following components:
- Household toilets, including conversion of insanitary latrines into pour-flush latrines;
- Community toilets
- Public toilets
- Solid waste management
- IEC & Public Awareness
- Capacity building and Administrative & Office Expenses (A&OE)
Phase 1 of the Swachh Bharat mission lasted till October 2019.
- The objectives of the first phase of the mission also included eradication of manual scavenging, generating awareness and bringing about a behaviour change regarding sanitation practices, and augmentation of capacity at the local level.
Phase 2 will be implemented between 2020–21 and 2024-25.
- The second phase will be implemented on a mission mode between 2020-21 and 2024-25.
- The second phase will focus on Open Defecation Free Plus (ODF Plus), which includes ODF sustainability and solid and liquid waste management (SLWM).
- The ODF Plus programme will converge with MGNREGA, especially for grey water management, and will complement the newly launched Jal Jeevan Mission.
- The programme will also work towards ensuring that no one is left behind and everyone uses a toilet.
- The fund sharing pattern between the Centre and States will be 90:10 for North-Eastern States and Himalayan States and UT of J&K; 60:40 for other States; and 100:0 for other Union Territories, for all the components.
Objectives of Swachh Bharat Mission- Urban:
- Eradication of open defecation in all statutory towns
- 100% scientific management of municipal solid waste in all statutory towns
- Effecting behaviour change through Jan Andolan
Key Components under Swachh Bharat Mission-Urban 2.0
The following will be the key components for implementation under SBM-U 2.0:
Sustainable Sanitation:
- The Mission will focus on ensuring complete access to sanitation facilities to serve additional population migrating from rural to urban areas in search of employment and better opportunities over the next 5 years.
- Complete liquid waste management in cities in less than 1 lakh population.
Sustainable Solid Waste Management:
- 100 percent source segregation of waste along with functional Material Recovery Facilities (MRFs) in every city, with a focus on phasing out single use plastic.
- Setting up of construction & demolition (C&D) waste processing facilities and deployment of mechanical sweepers in National Clean Air Programme (NCAP) cities and in cities with more than 5 lakh population
- Remediation of all legacy dumpsites, so that 14,000 acres of locked up land lying under 15 crore tonnes of legacy waste are freed up.
Challenges for SBM
- The massive task is to include people who still lack toilets, overcome partial toilet use, and retrofit toilets which are not yet sustainably safe.
- The quality of toilets constructed left much to be desired, and local level malpractice.
- Rural and small town faecal sludge management as tanks and single pits fill up and are difficult to empty.
- Overemphasis on toilet construction rather than focussing on all parameters.
- The ODF status has been mainly awarded to the village, district or state only based on the number of toilets built without mention of termination of fecal-oral transmission and absence of visible feces in the environment as major parameters in the SBM guidelines.
- Waste Treatment: Despite considerable progress in the door to door waste collection, only one-third of the waste being generated is being processed.
- Manual Scavenging
Need of the hour
- Creating demand for toilets: higher proportion of funds should be directed towards educating people about hygiene and the social marketing of toilets.
- Ground-level verification: To resolve the issue of over/under reporting of government set targets, verification of facts on the ground with the help of local and village governments.
- Disposal of feces: proper facilities for the disposal of excreta should be established which goes untreated and harms the environment.
- Sewage Treatment and solid waste management: Different cost-effective technologies must be adopted for sewage treatments and proper disposal of waste from toilets.
- Manual scavenging: Use of technology in eradicating the practice of manual scavenging. Educating and empowering the lower castes through laws by encouraging them to pursue alternative jobs and possibly providing them with subsidies to build latrine facilities can also be a step in this direction.
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