GPS will now reduce the bill for Bruhat |
Adequate support
The State Government, which has provided adequate budgetary support to the BBMP for the current year in ensuring that Bangalore has good infrastructure in place apart from garbage clearance, has extended full support to the municipal authorities to bring in whatever changes the local authorities deem fit to improve the face of the city.
The Government has now learnt that all is not proper in garbage clearance in
Acting on the advice of experts, the BBMP authorities began fitting GPS (Global Positioning System) devices on all trucks deployed by the contractors to clear garbage from
The aim was to track the movement of the trucks and the quantum of garbage that they clear on a continuous basis. Each GPS device costs around Rs. 6,000 and the BBMP has been fitting it on to private trucks at its cost. The garbage clearance system is closely tracked from a room in the BBMP headquarters.
Shocking discovery
Much to the shock of the authorities, while the contractors had claimed that they had deployed 270 trucks, only 200 turned up for the installation of the GPS device, and a number of them were newly registered.
Further, while it was originally believed that 3,500 tonnes of garbage is generated in
Further, the contractors also took a weekend holiday since hardly any garbage was carried to the dumps on Saturdays and Sundays.
Findings submitted
Commissioner of the BBMP S. Subramanya has submitted the findings to the Government. Sources in the State Secretariat told The Hindu that the BBMP Commissioner has been fully empowered to take appropriate action against the garbage contractors concerned.
Asked about the new tracking system, Dr. Subramanya told The Hindu that garbage clearance was now being closely monitored, and the bills of the contractors would be settled based on the weight of the garbage delivered at the dump yards and the distance covered.
“We are now finalising a foolproof system. The BBMP hitherto spent over Rs. 110 crore a year for garbage clearance and given the nature of the garbage being cleared, the cost should come down.
According to the BBMP records, the contractors are stated to have deployed nearly 300 trucks, and inclusive of the trucks owned by the BBMP nearly 400 are involved in garbage clearance.
Shoddy job
The GPRS system has now brought to light that most of the garbage trucks are never at work and even the garbage clearance at the field level (streets of
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