Boards are understaffed, have little time for meetings, inspection or regulation, says study
Environmental protection seems to be in shaky hands with political
appointees nominated to head state pollution control boards (SPCB) in
some places. In one case, the educational qualification of the
chairperson was tenth standard.
In Karnataka, for instance, the chairperson of the SPCB is Vaman
Acharya, a senior BJP leader. In Himachal Pradesh, it is Kuldip Singh
Pathania, a Congress party leader and former MLA, and, in Uttar Pradesh,
Waseem Ahmed Khan was the head of the board for six months till he was
removed in February 2013. Khan was appointed at the behest of a
political party leader.
In Arunachal Pradesh, Ramol Barang, a sitting NCP MLA heads the SPCB and
in Manipur the honour has fallen on E. Dwijamani Singh, also a sitting
MLA. In Maharashtra J.S. Sahani, a former bureaucrat, heads the board.
Ms. C. C. Sangdarpa, a tenth standard pass, was chairperson of the SPCB
in Sikkim from 2005- 2009, according to a new study based on information
culled under the Right to Information (RTI) act, which has found
serious lacunae in the functioning of 28 SPCBs in India, mandated to
implement laws related to environmental protection and air and water
quality.
The study says such appointments are in blatant violation of Supreme
Court guidelines and the law, according to which chairpersons should be
qualified in the field of environment or should have special knowledge
of the subject. Mr. Sahani has retired and by appointing him for only
one year, the Maharashtra government has violated section 4 of the Water
(Prevention and Control of Pollution) Act 1974 which says the minimum
tenure should be three years.
Titled “Environmental Regulatory Authorities in India: An assessment of
state pollution control boards,” by Geetanjoy Sahu, assistant professor,
Centre for Science, Technology and Society, School of Habitat Studies
at Tata Institute of Social Sciences (TISS), the study raises doubts
about the efficacy of SPCBs but finds no evidence to support new
regulatory bodies in the form of the National Environmental Protection
Authority or the National Environment Assessment and Monitoring
Authority proposed by the Ministry of Environment and Forests (MoEF).
Apart from unqualified political appointees, the SPCBs are understaffed
and have little time for meetings, inspection or regulation, says the
study. Chairpersons remain symbolic and data shows that except in
Arunachal Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Goa, Nagaland and Tripura, the average
tenure of the chairperson in all other SPCBs has been less than three
years. Though it is mandatory for the SPCBs to meet at least once in
three months, the study finds that the meetings have not been consistent
and often not well attended. They also have less than 17 members
stipulated under the law. Board members should have a three-year tenure
which is rare.
The study found a shortfall in human, technical and financial resources
and increasing political interference and inability of SPCBs to adapt to
emerging environmental problems. Poor resources and increasing
political interference created hurdles in implementing environmental
standards and norms effectively at the grassroots level, the study
concludes.
The TISS study was conducted in March-June 2012 and analysed data from
RTIs, reports and interviews. Even earlier studies pointed to
environmental regulatory bodies facing a number of challenges such as
lack of resources and increasing political interference in the
performance of their statutory duties.
No industry can be set up without prior permission from the SPCBs that
mainly regulate air and water quality and also approve locations for
industries and conduct inspections or determine effluent standards for
waste, among other duties. The Central Pollution Control Board in June
2006 said there were 2672 highly polluting industries and more than 1551
industries were not complying with norms laid down by SPCBs.
Inspections are not conducted to check compliance as stack tests are
rarely conducted. According to MoEF, Small and Medium Enterprises (SME)
contribute to 70 per cent of the environmental pollution load in India.
Many States have not increased the staff strength of the SPCBs and
report many vacancies. For example the study quotes a media report
saying Kerala still operates with the staff strength it had been
allocated in 1995, though new areas like municipal solid waste
management, biomedical waste and high-rise buildings have been brought
under its ambit. Of the sanctioned strength of around 320, 150 remain
vacant. A committee appointed by the Supreme Court had recommended
sanctioning 20 additional posts to the Kerala SPCB around six years ago,
but nothing has been done so far.
Shortage of staff is a serious issue and Bihar, Chhattisgarh and Odisha
SPCBs have not recruited even one person in the last five years. While
environmental engineers and scientists have been recruited, these
appointments are contractual and the salary is so low that most of them
either leave or work under tremendous pressure.
http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/political-meddling-proves-toxic-for-pollution-control-boards/article4937838.ece
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