Professional Documents
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Niva Patra Report
Niva Patra Report
MISSION
HMS delivers Integrated Solutions (Audit, Consultancy, Advisory, Execution,
Implementation) in Diverse Fields (Facility Management, Housekeeping, Hygiene,
Safety & Security, Technical) by leveraging technology & expertise thereby
providing strategic value to our stakeholders & be a Company that attracts/recruits/
retains smart & talented employees.
Services of HMS
Security services: - Human Matrix can assure you that your offices, events,
industrial plants, worksites are safe and secure with them. Aspire to provide
the most cost-effective and efficient security services. They have a
technology-based, innovative and well-planned system to supervise these
trained personnel who work under our professional security managers.
Swachh Bharat Mission: - Human Matrix is Central India’s multifarious
organization that is committed to being the catalyst for the change to make
India adapt a self-sustainable and perpetual path towards “Swachhata”.
Monitoring of Solid Waste Management activities for Urban Local Bodies.
Infrastructure : - Team HMS completed project which is a state-of-the-art
Fire Station in Sanwer Road Industrial Area Under the aegis of MPAKVN,
A monumental “Shaheed Smarak Park” has been developed under the aegis
of Indore Development Authority, and associated with the IMC in the
maintenance of Indore City’s Street Lights.
Housekeeping: - Human Matrix, design an integrated housekeeping system
with other supporting services like guest house management, security
services etc. All these integrated services ensure maximum efficiency at the
workplace.
Home Services: - HMS have established management systems and qualified
personnel to provide a full range of high-end employment services
including housemaids, catering personnel, Nanny & Baby Sitters, Personal
Security Guards, Body Guards. Deep Cleaning Services etc.
Facility Management: - Human Matrix encompasses multiple disciplines
to ensure functionality, comfort, safety and efficiency of the built
environment by integrating people, place, process and technology.
STRUCTURE
MANAGING DIRECTOR
CEO
PROJECT HEAD
ZONE INCHARGE
WARD INCHARGE
FIELD COORDINATORS
SWACHH BHARAT MISSION AND HMS
The Prime Minister of India had launched the Swachh Bharat Mission on 2nd
October 2014. Under the mission, all villages, Gram Panchayats, Districts, States
and Union Territories in India declared themselves "open-defecation free" (ODF)
by 2 October 2019. It is a restructured version of the Nirmal Bharat Abhiyan
launched in 2009 that failed to achieve its intended targets.
PHASE I
The second phase of the mission aims to sustain the open defecation free status and
improve the management of solid and liquid waste. The mission is aimed at
progressing towards target 6.2 of the Sustainable Development Goals Number 6
established by the United Nations in 2015.
India faces two major challenges – waste generation & management and lack of
access to a basic sanitation facility such as a toilet. As per Tata Strategic estimates,
India produces ~54 million tonnes of solid waste every year and as per UNICEF
India, about 564 million people defecate in the open. According to a World Bank
study, absence of toilets and conventional sanitation cost the country 6.4% of its
GDP in 2006. Prior to the Swachh Bharat Mission, programmes such as Total
Sanitation Campaign and the ‘Nirmal Bharat Abhiyan’ existed, but were supply
driven (wherein NGOs were tasked to construct toilets). As the focus was on the
number of toilets constructed, no attention was given to the quality of toilets
constructed or bringing about a change in human behaviour. Therefore, some
households that started using toilets slipped back to defecating in the open.
Carrying out the spirit of “Azadi ka Amrit Mahotsav” the objective of the notice
issued by govt was to curb the pollution caused by the littered and unmanaged
plastic waste from the country. On India’s Independence Day in 2019, Prime
Minister Narendra Modi had appealed to the citizens to make the country free from
single- use plastics (SUP) and work towards this mission wholehearted. The
agenda of making the country SUP-free also featured in the monthly “Mann
ki baat” in December 2020.
In line with the announcement, the Union Ministry of Environment, Forest and
Climate Change notified Plastic Waste Management Amendment Rules, 2021,
on August 12, 2021, prohibiting 20 identified single-use plastic items by 2022
Starting from September 30, 2021 through July 1, 2022, SUPs — mostly those
manufactured by small and medium industries — will be phased out. The schedule
does not cover a range of SUPs generated by fast-moving consumer goods
companies.
LIST OF BANNED SINGLE USE PLASTIC
Phase out
Category Sn. Item
date
CARRY BAGS
3 1.7.2022
4 Ear buds with plastic sticks
7 Candy sticks
8 Ice-cream sticks
10 Plates
11 Cups
12 Glasses
13 Forks
14 Spoons
15 Knives
16 Straw
17 Trays
Wrapping or packing films around sweet boxes,
18
invitation cards and cigarette packets
20 Stirrers
OFFICIAL NOTIFICATION
ASSIGNED AREA
ZONE- 06
WARD- 26
NOTE
Lack of awareness: - the main challenge during the awareness campaign was lack
of awareness among the people about single use plastic and its ill effects. So,
making them understand was a difficult task.
Political interference: - the area allotted to us was strongly a political area, during
our internship we faced political challenges. Like, one day the president of the
business association said you cannot do all these activities in my area. Later the
matter was resolved but because of this incident, people of the area again started
neglecting the points which we told them during the awareness campaigns.
High costing of alternatives: - the cost of alternatives to single use plastic was
higher. So, it was difficult for the shopkeepers to switch to these costly alternatives
but they cooperated with us well.
Huge stock: - Huge stock of plastic which is already manufactured and the
supply of plastic is still going on
AIM OF INTERNSHIP
Try stainless steel straws, bamboo straws, pasta straws and rice straws.
Instead of balloons, choose more environmental-friendly decorations such as
flowers, DIY paper flowers, paper lanterns, recycled bunting.
Give up plastic ear buds and switch to bamboo cotton buds, or fluid ear
washes. If you use the ear buds for makeup, opt for cotton as a makeup
remover tool.
Plastic cups are so yesterday! Take a reusable glass or mug to office or
school and save the environment.
Plastic cutlery is extremely wasteful - Try using reusable bamboo utensils or
invest in a travel cutlery set.
For grocery shopping, carry jute or cloth bags from home.
Get yourself a steel bottle for the long-term instead of a plastic one
CONCLUSION
Plastic is one of the most common materials in our lives. It is used for everything
from food containers, to water bottles, to straws and bags.
Plastic has been around for more than a century and it has become the most
popular material because it is cheap and durable. Plastic production has increased
by 20-fold in just 50 years.
In 2017, 8 million metric tonnes of plastic were produced globally with only 6%
recycled. That’s equivalent to a garbage truck full of plastic every minute!
The ban on single use plastics is a step to achieve the sustainable development
goals (SDGs) 2030. The SDGs are a set of global objectives that all countries have
to work on together in order to make sure that the world becomes more
sustainable.