Wish list for 2013
If you want unobstructed water wealth, here are suggestions from water activist S. Vishwanath
This is the time of the year when you do a roundup of
what went by but perhaps more importantly what can occur in the near
future. Here then is a wish list for 2013 vis-à-vis water in all its
forms.
We will all become water warriors – Let
us imagine an active citizenry engaged daily in wise water use, water
conservation, and solid waste management such that water is not wasted
or the environment polluted by any one of their actions. It is not too
difficult and as Gandhiji said, “Be the change you want to see in the
world.”
The institution will achieve universal coverage
– Each and every home in the city will have a water and sanitation
connection, be it ‘pucca’ or ‘kutcha’, be it legal or not, be it in a
slum or in a posh neighbourhood. Difficult? Not really if each ward of
the city measures the connections achieved on a monthly basis.
The tanks in the city will all be revived
– That every locality will have a clean expanse of water body to gaze
at, to walk around, and to see the birds and that it will be a community
property resource for all to enjoy.
The storm-water drains in the city will be cleaned
– Sewage treatment plants distributed across the city will clean all
the waste-water picked up by an efficient sewage line network. The
treated waste-water will be let into wetlands which abut tanks and
thence will fill the water body to the brim. Only rainwater from roads
will flow in the storm drains.
Rainwater harvesting in every home
– Rain barrels will dot every home and every apartment, collecting
rainwater for supplementary use. Those buildings which cannot will
collect rainwater in sumps or make recharge wells to allow it to go into
the aquifer replenishing it.
Saying no to unnecessary borewells
– The mad drilling of individual borewells will stop. Instead, a
sharing of ground-waters through community borewells will happen. People
will contribute to keeping these borewells recharged through individual
point recharge structures in stormwater drains and within the plot.
Septic tanks and pit toilets
– Those buildings not connected to the sewage lines will have
well-designed septic tanks and pit toilets emptied at regular intervals
by mechanical sludge removers called Honeysuckers. This removed sludge
will be scientifically composted and reused as fertilizer to revitalise
soils all across the city.
Looking at schools, colleges, anganwadis and hospitals
– Special attention will be paid to these institutions which the young
and the vulnerable occupy. Water and sanitation will be available 24/7,
thus ensuring health, hygiene and water literacy.
Parks and playgrounds
– Most of the parks will become tree-based instead of the water
guzzling lawn-based parks. Each park will harvest its own rainwater
correctly by linking catchment, conveyance and recharge properly.
Here
is wishing us to become a water-sensitive city, to be achieved in this
year itself. ‘You may say I’m a dreamer but I’m not the only one,’ as
one Beatles number famously goes.
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