PATNA: Six days have elapsed since A2Z, a private firm mandated by the Patna Municipal Corporation (PMC) to maintain sanitation in 10 wards and nine main roads in the city, suspended its services due to non-payment of its bills by the PMC, but the civic body is yet to come to the rescue of residents.
This reporter visited Ashok Rajpath, Hardinge Road, Exhibition Road, Beerchand Patel Path and other localities and found heaps of garbage and overflowing drains in these areas. The dirt and filth all around have made the surroundings conducive for mosquitoes to breed. "My two grandchildren are suffering from fever," a retired judge, who lives on the Boring Canal Road, said and added people, especially children, cannot stay healthy while living amid muck and waste.
This reporter visited Ashok Rajpath, Hardinge Road, Exhibition Road, Beerchand Patel Path and other localities and found heaps of garbage and overflowing drains in these areas. The dirt and filth all around have made the surroundings conducive for mosquitoes to breed. "My two grandchildren are suffering from fever," a retired judge, who lives on the Boring Canal Road, said and added people, especially children, cannot stay healthy while living amid muck and waste.
PMC did deploy its rundown infrastructure and meagre manpower to fill in for the private player. But that has proved to be the proverbial drop in the ocean. This reporter spotted two small loaders on the Beerchand Patel Path around 1pm on Wednesday. "What should we do when there is no truck?" asked a man operating the loader and added that the truck had gone to dump the garbage and he would resume his job after the vehicle returned.
As the PMC trucks transport garbage during busy hours, pedestrians and bikers are hard hit. "Garbage-laden open trucks leave behind a deadly smell that stirs our innards," complained a student standing near A N College. A BJP worker, Pradeep Dubey said that the PMC must honour its agreement with the private agency immediately so as to rescue the residents from the hellish situation.
The crisis has spawned another crisis. "With the PMC pushing all its resources to the city's main roads, the localities on the fringe have become no one's baby," lamented Dr Sudeep Ghosh, who runs a clinic at Hanuman Nagar. Sanitation workers are a rare sight in the areas like Doctors' Colony, P C Colony, Rajendra Nagar Terminal, Kashi Nath Lane, Nala Road and Mathura Prasad Sinha Path, among others, complained locals. "On Tuesday, locals had to pool money to hire sanitation workers and rid the locality of the three overflowing bins of garbage," said Rajesh Pandey of Chandmari Road.
If urban development department principal secretary Shashi Shekhar Sharma is to be believed, things would improve after a couple of days. "The payment to A2Z would be made within two days," he told TOI on Wednesday evening.
Asked about the infighting in the PMC and its councillors' resolution seeking the removal of PMC commissioner Divesh Sehra, Sharma said the government is looking into the demand and would respond to it in a day or two.
As the PMC trucks transport garbage during busy hours, pedestrians and bikers are hard hit. "Garbage-laden open trucks leave behind a deadly smell that stirs our innards," complained a student standing near A N College. A BJP worker, Pradeep Dubey said that the PMC must honour its agreement with the private agency immediately so as to rescue the residents from the hellish situation.
The crisis has spawned another crisis. "With the PMC pushing all its resources to the city's main roads, the localities on the fringe have become no one's baby," lamented Dr Sudeep Ghosh, who runs a clinic at Hanuman Nagar. Sanitation workers are a rare sight in the areas like Doctors' Colony, P C Colony, Rajendra Nagar Terminal, Kashi Nath Lane, Nala Road and Mathura Prasad Sinha Path, among others, complained locals. "On Tuesday, locals had to pool money to hire sanitation workers and rid the locality of the three overflowing bins of garbage," said Rajesh Pandey of Chandmari Road.
If urban development department principal secretary Shashi Shekhar Sharma is to be believed, things would improve after a couple of days. "The payment to A2Z would be made within two days," he told TOI on Wednesday evening.
Asked about the infighting in the PMC and its councillors' resolution seeking the removal of PMC commissioner Divesh Sehra, Sharma said the government is looking into the demand and would respond to it in a day or two.