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Clean house: On India’s septic tank desludging | Current Affairs | Vision IAS

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Clean house: On India’s septic tank desludging

2 min read

Hazardous Cleaning Deaths and Social Audit Findings

The deaths of 150 individuals in 2022 and 2023 due to hazardous cleaning practices highlight a severe issue rooted in a problematic business model. The Ministry of Social Justice presented a social audit in Parliament, revealing critical insights into the employment conditions of these workers.

Employment Conditions and Legislative Response

  • 38 workers were hired by local contractors, with only 5 being on a government payroll.
  • The rest were 'loaned' public sector workers to private employers, which blurred liability lines.
  • Progress remains insufficient despite the 2013 Prohibition of Employment as Manual Scavengers Act, court orders, Swachh Bharat advisories, and 2023 NAMASTE scheme.

Statistics and Implementation Gaps

  • 57,758 workers engaged in hazardous cleaning; only 16,791 received PPE kits.
  • Fewer than 14,000 workers have health cards, and only 837 safety workshops have been conducted across 4,800 urban local bodies.

Technology and Political Will: Success Stories

  • In Odisha, workers have access to PPE kits and mechanized desludging vehicles.
  • Tamil Nadu has successfully piloted sewer robots in Chennai, cleaning over 5,000 manholes.

Challenges in Policy and Enforcement

  • Lack of data on rural sanitation workers and insufficient enforcement are major issues.
  • Government tenders still favor manual cleaning bids despite technological alternatives.
  • Only ₹14 crore released under NAMASTE scheme, inadequate for mechanizing sewer cleaning in even one major city.
  • In case of worker deaths, legal accountability is often misplaced on lower-level supervisors.

Judicial and Policy Recommendations

  • The Supreme Court has called for canceling offending contracts and imposing monetary liabilities on principal employers.
  • Two-thirds of validated workers are Dalits; rehabilitation packages should include housing and scholarships.
  • Women who sweep dry latrines receive minimal policy focus.

Strategic Measures for Improvement

  • Urban local bodies should mechanize sewer-cleaning urgently and make it a licensed trade.
  • Upscale loans for operating machines replacing manual entry, linked to service contracts from municipalities.
  • Include septic tank desludging in the Swachh Bharat rural budget and extend NAMASTE profiling to gram panchayats.
  • Tags :
  • Social Audit
  • NAMASTE scheme
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