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Open Defecation Free Tamil Nadu by 2014: Vision, Challenges and Way Forward. Somya Sethuraman : Researcher, Institute for Financial Management and Research, Chennai. January 27, 2012 , Consultative Workshop on Sanitation Policy, CMA, Chennai. Table of Contents. Urbanization in Tamil Nadu
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Open Defecation Free Tamil Nadu by 2014: Vision, Challenges and Way Forward SomyaSethuraman: Researcher, Institute for Financial Management and Research, Chennai January 27, 2012, Consultative Workshop on Sanitation Policy, CMA, Chennai
Table of Contents • Urbanization in Tamil Nadu • Sanitation Statistics • National Urban Sanitation Policy • Proposed Funding Requirements (2011-2015) • Challenges • Way Forward
Urbanization in Tamil Nadu • City Municipal Corporations : 10 • Municipalities : 125 • Town Panchayats : 529 • Tamil Nadu - one of the most urbanized states in India • TN Population : 72 million (2011) • Urban population : 35 million (48%)
Service Gaps continue to grow with greater urbanization Source: Census of India, Secondary Research • Projected urban population in 2026: 69.1% • Projected Slum Population in 2017: 1 crore
Extended areas of Urban Agglomerations witnessing rapid growth Source: Census 2001, 2011 (Provisional), Secondary Research
All districts need considerable improvement (NUSP, MoUD:2009-10) Source: NUSP, MoUD, Secondary Research
Tamil Nadu: Sanitation Statistics • 57% of households in Tamil Nadu do not have a toilet facility Out of 5.9 million (2001) urban households in TN- • 35.7% of urban households do not have access to toilets • 7.7% of urban households use the community toilets • 30 % of households do not have access to drainage networks • 35 % of households are connected to open drains - (NFHS-3) - Census 2001
Percentage of Population covered by UGS Source: CMA, Secondary Research
Percentage of Road length covered Source: CMA, Secondary Research
Slum Population per seat of Public Convenience Source: CMA, Secondary Research
Municipalities which far exceed the 60 persons norm for Slum Population per seat of Public Convenience Source: CMA, Secondary Research
Vision All Indian cities and towns become totally sanitized, healthy and liveable and ensure and sustain good public health and environmental outcomes for all their citizens with a special focus on hygienic and affordable sanitation facilities for the urban poor and women. Policy Goal The overall goal of this policy is to transform Urban India into community-driven, totally sanitized, healthy and liveable cities and towns.
A Specific Goal B. Achieving Open Defecation Free Cities All urban dwellers will have access to and use safe and hygienic sanitation facilities and arrangements so that no one defecates in the open. In order to achieve this goal, the following activities shall be undertaken: • Promoting access to households with safe sanitation facilities (including proper disposal arrangements); • Promoting community-planned and managed toilets wherever necessary, for groups of households who have constraints of space, tenure or economic constraints in gaining access to individual facilities; • Adequate availability and 100 % upkeep and management of Public Sanitation facilities in all Urban Areas, to rid them of open defecation and environmental hazards;
Allocation of Funds for Individual Toilets* * All figures subject to confirmation Source: CMA, Secondary Research
Allocation of Funds for Common Toilets* * All figures subject to confirmation Source: CMA, Secondary Research
Fund allocation by type of toilet and implementing body (2011-15) * * All figures subject to confirmation Source: CMA, Secondary Research
Funds allocated for New Individual Toilets Source: CMA, Secondary Research * All figures subject to confirmation
Funds allocated for New Common Toilets Source: CMA, Secondary Research * All figures subject to confirmation
Ranking of Districts on Sanitation Indicators: Key Gaps Source: CMA, Secondary Research
KEY ISSUES • Social and Occupational aspects of Sanitation • Awareness Generation • Institutional Roles and Responsibilities • Choice of Technology • Reaching the un-served and the Poor • Demand Generation
Our biggest concern: Projected Slum Population in 2017 is 1 crore Tamil Nadu has more than a quarter of its urban population in slums, and a large number of urban poor. We need a clear plan to address the sanitation issues in these poor colonies. The proportion of notified and non-notified slums with no latrine facility is significantly higher for Tamil Nadu; 27 per cent and 40 per cent respectively Our inability to regularly recognize or “declare” slums has led to an absence of comprehensive data about informal settlements, because of which the poor continue to live without basic infrastructure and civic amenities
Services do not reach the poor due to lack of usable data Chennai Map : Slums Layer overlaid on Toilets Layer (2011), along with administrative boundaries
Toilets not in area of apparent need Clusters of Slums and Zero Toilets
Baseline data collection - GIS • Awareness Generation: Behavioural change • Integrated City-Wide Sanitation • Safe Disposal of waste • Upkeep of Sanitary Installations • Implementation Support Strategy • State Government Support: CSP, DPR, PPP, Funding, Capacity Bldg, Awards • Legal Regulations: Acts, Rules, byelaws • Communication Strategy • Target Audience: Households – women and children • Key Messages • Hygiene Education as an integral component of the school syllabus • Elected Representatives in Management Role • Partnerships with NGOs, CBOs, and resource institutions • Women’s Self Help Groups
Integrated city wide sanitation plans Data collection - GIS OPEN DEFECATION FREE TAMIL NADU Implementation and monitoring – Elected representatives, NGOs, CBOs, Women Self Help Groups State government support and Legislations
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