Vatavaran works on socio-environmental issues through  creating simple, replicable models to mitigate problems. One aspect of Vatavaran’s  work is managing garbage through the so-called Cleaning Brigade Scheme. The  scheme is scientific, employment-generating, and resident-friendly. Cleaning  brigades manage solid waste for at least 2.5 million residents in Delhi. The  working principle is that since each of us is responsible for creating garbage,  it is imperative that we share the responsibility to manage it. It is possible  to make each colony a zero-garbage area, and Vatavaran can play a catalyst’s  role in that.

At least eight per cent of India’s landmass has become  wasteland due to open garbage dumps. These dumps are breeding ground for  infectious diseases like plague, cholera, tuberculosis, jaundice, and numerous  skin aliments. The unmanaged garbage also leaves behind a spate of civic woes  such as logging of sewers and uncontrollable emission of toxic gases.

Cleaning brigades operate along simple and sustainable  lines. The garbage is collected from door to door, at a nominal charge of Rs 60  per month per house. The waste collected is segregated. The biodegradable waste  is used for making organic compost through the pit system and sold at Rs 5 per  kilogram. The non-biodegradable is further segregated into groups such as  glass, paper, and plastics, and then sent to recycling industries or to mills  that require these for raw material. The money collected through the scheme is  distributed back to the workers in the form of pay. The cleaning brigades  manage garbage for a maximum number of people without using heavy vehicles,  loaders, machines, or plants.

Anaerobic composting is done for residential areas as  it does not require any initial investment. Also, it means there are no open  dumps or stench, as both vegetarian and non-vegetarian leftovers can be  composted. For schools, wormicomposting is preferred because worm pits are  popular with students. They study the process of composting in their biology  classes and analyse the compost in their chemistry classes.

When residents of a colony contact Vatavaran for  launching their cleaning brigade, the quantum and type of garbage produced by  the colony is studied. Next, a patch of wasteland within the colony is selected  for composting. Local ragpickers and underprivileged, unemployed youth are  trained to collect and segregate the garbage.

Before launching of the scheme, the concerned resident  welfare association (RWA) is required to send a notification to all the  residents of the colony requesting them to join the scheme. Further, the RWA  must arrange for an appropriately designed three-wheeler cycle rickshaw for the  transportation of garbage. Other responsibilities for the RWA include  demarcating wasteland for segregating and composting, providing uniforms to the  cleaning brigade, helping the supervisor to collect monthly payment from  residents, and monitoring the day-to-day working of the scheme.

Vatavaran has published a report titled ‘Garbage  Management: My Experience ‘ by Dr. Iqbal Malik, founder and executive director  of Vatavaran. The project has been extensively documented on video cassettes,  some of which can be procured from the University Grants Commission, India.

Carry on the  solid work
In south Delhi’s residential colonies such as Asiad  Village and Vasant Kunj, the waste-management initiative is now being carried forward by the respective RWAs. The compost pits yield high-quality manure that  is either sold or used to promote horticultural activities within the colony. Vatavaran has successfully set up cleaning brigades in low-, middle- and high-income  residential localities, educational institutes, markets, and resettlement colonies  with the help of local communities. Vatavaran has already converted Jawaharlal  Nehru University (JNU) and University of Delhi South Campus (UDSC) into zero-garbage areas. It has assisted various colleges and schools in setting up  paper, plastic, or waste management programmes.

Vatavaran also studies solid waste situation in railway  stations, markets and commercial establishments, hospitals, etc., and  recommends changes according to the context. In 1996, a thriving hospital waste  market existed behind Safdarjung Hospital in Delhi; its exposure by Vatavaran  led to its closing as well as delineation of hospital waste management rules by  the Supreme Court.

The organisation has trained 11 Delhi-based NGOs in  waste management and monitoring of plastics, metals, glass, rubber, etc. These  NGOs are Indcare, Accord, Samarth, Development Alternatives, Navjyoti, Disha, Deepalaya, Concern India, Iffcord, Rotary Eco Foundation, and Inner Wheel.

Vatavaran has twice been conferred with the ‘Best  Practices Award’ by United Nations Cell on Human Settlements (UNCHS), in the  years 2000 and 2006.