News Brief

Mysore, Navi Mumbai Among Six Cities Rated 5-Star In Garbage-Free Status, No City Ranked 7-Star In Swachh Survey 

Arun Kumar Das

May 20, 2020, 11:11 AM | Updated 11:11 AM IST


Indore was declared as the cleanest city according to Swachh Survekshan 2017.
Indore was declared as the cleanest city according to Swachh Survekshan 2017.
  • The star-rating of garbage-free cities was conducted by Housing and Urban Affairs Ministry under the Swachh Survekshan with focus on solid waste management.
  • Mysore, Indore and Navi Mumbai are among six cities in the country which have come out with flying colours achieving 5-star ratings for keeping their areas garbage free.

    Ambikapur, Rajkot and Surat are other cities which have also been rated with a 5-Star ranking in the rating of garbage free cities across the country.

    The star-rating of garbage-free cities was conducted by Housing and Urban Affairs Ministry under the Swachh Survekshan with focus on solid waste management.

    NDMC area of the capital city, the VIP area which houses the Supreme Court, Parliament, Connaught Place and ministerial bungalows however, has been rated 3-Star along with 64 other cities.

    Tirupati, Chandigarh, Bilaspur, Jamshedpur, Bhopal and Gandhinagar are among 65 cities which got 3-Star rating in the country-wide survey of garbage-free cities.

    There are 70 cities including Delhi Cantonment, Rohtak, Gwalior, Akola and Ghaziabad which got 1-Star rating.

    However, no city qualified to achieve 7-Star rating though many have applied for the same.

    The star rating was given based on 25 key parameters across the solid waste management spectrum.

    Announcing the results of the star rating on Tuesday, Housing and Urban Affairs Minister Hardeep Puri said the aim of the survey to motivate cities to achieve higher degrees of cleanliness.

    Referring to the pandemic, Puri said, “The importance of sanitation and effective solid waste management has been brought to the forefront now due to the Covid-19 crisis. In fact, it would not be an exaggeration to say that the present situation could have been much worse had it not been for the critical part that Swachh Bharat Mission
    has played in the last five years to ensure a high degree of cleanliness and
    sanitation in urban areas.

    In the recent phase of Star Rating Assessment, 1,435 cities applied. During the
    assessments, 1.19 crore citizen feedbacks and over 10 lakh geo-tagged pictures
    were collected and 5,175 solid waste processing plants were visited by 1,210 field
    assessors.

    While 698 cities cleared the desktop assessment, 141 cities have been
    certified with Star Rating during field assessment.

    Housing and Urban Affairs Secretary Durga Shankar Mishra said, “The low number of certifications signifies the rigorous and robust certification mechanism of the protocol.
    Launching the revised protocol for the Star Rating Framework, Mishra elaborated, “Our endeavor is to constantly revisit and strengthen the framework basis the feedback received from cities.'
    Launched five years ago, Swachh Survekshan, the annual cleanliness survey for urban India has proven immensely successful when it comes to improving urban cleanliness through a spirit of healthy competition.

    According to the Ministry, the certification is not only an acknowledgement of the clean status of Urban Local Bodies and strengthened solid waste management systems but also a mark of trust and reliability akin to universally known standards.

    In the light of the Covid-19 crisis, the Ministry has issued detailed guidelines to all states and cities on special cleaning of public places and collection and disposal of bio-medical waste from quarantined households.

    It has also revised its citizen grievance redressal platform, Swacchata App, in order to enable citizens to get their Covid-related issues redressed by their respective ULBs.

    Touching upon the aspect of safety and well-being of sanitation workers, the Minister added, “Ministry has also issued an advisory in this regard which touches upon the aspect of provision of PPEs, health-check-ups and payment of regular wages to sanitation workers. I am happy to see that the services of sanitation workers are being duly recognised by the authorities and citizens alike.”

    Arun Kumar Das is a senior journalist covering railways. He can be contacted at akdas2005@gmail.com.


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