Waste Warriors - Our Efforts || Our Impact · 2020. 6. 18. · municipal solid waste every day....

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Our Efforts || Our Impact Outreach & Partnerships in Dehradun 2017 - 2019 supported by

Transcript of Waste Warriors - Our Efforts || Our Impact · 2020. 6. 18. · municipal solid waste every day....

Page 1: Waste Warriors - Our Efforts || Our Impact · 2020. 6. 18. · municipal solid waste every day. That is a huge amount and, ... towards integrating the unorganized waste sector into

Our Efforts || Our Impact Outreach & Partnerships in Dehradun

2017 - 2019

supported by

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India’s Waste Crisis

India now generates over 1.75 lakh

tonnes (that is 175 million kgs) of

municipal solid waste every day.

That is a huge amount and,

unfortunately due to a lack of

proper municipal services and

awareness, a lot of that waste does

not get segregated or collected.

Instead it gets littered, illegally

dumped and, even worse, burned

to ashes. All this waste produces

huge amounts of potentially toxic

microplastics, leachate, and fumes

which are unhealthy for all life in our

fragile environment, including us.

All of us have been and continue to be

witness to and unassuming victims of

this mismanagement on a daily basis,

whether it is in urban streets, in rural

areas, or now unfortunately even in

otherwise beautiful places: on

mountain trails, in dense forests, by the

banks of rivers, and over large fields.

The urgent need to act against this

human-made disaster is the driving

force behind our organization. It is why

we need to raise levels of public

awareness towards better waste

management practices in both urban

and rural landscapes across India.

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India’s Waste Crisis

At current dumping rates, India will need a 66,000-hectare landfill, 10m high, that could hold 20 years’ worth of waste. That is ~ 90% of Bengaluru’s area!

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● A clean and healthy India, which has systems in place to ensure that

every citizen disposes their waste correctly and feels a sense of civic

responsibility and national pride regarding cleanliness.

● A healthier India with improved living standards and a better quality of

life where waste workers are valued and respected for their

contribution.

Our Vision

Our Mission

● Be a catalyst for community-based decentralized Solid Waste

Management (SWM) initiatives in rural, urban, and protected areas

and to pioneer replicable models of resource management,

innovative practices, research and education in the field of solid

waste management.

● Improve working conditions for waste workers and take positive steps

towards integrating the unorganized waste sector into the formal

Solid Waste Management (SWM) industry whilst reducing the stigma

attached to waste.

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About Us

Founded in 2012, Waste Warriors is a

solid waste management NGO and

registered society that works through

a combination of direct action

initiatives, awareness-raising and

community engagement programs,

local advocacy, and long-term

collaborative partnership with various

government bodies. Our vision of a

clean India is broad but for good

reason: India’s population of 1.3

billion is in a time where sustainable

solid waste management is struggling

to catch up to exponential

consumption rates from all

socioeconomic backgrounds.

Our vision drives us to implement

sustainable solid waste management

systems and drastically improve

public awareness towards the harms

of waste pollution, and the benefits of

waste segregation and composting.

We also work towards expanding

waste collection services either by

training local communities to be

self-reliant by organizing their own

collection and segregation systems,

or by formally employing waste

pickers to join our projects to lift their

lives out of poverty and stigma.

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Outreach and Partnerships

This is why Waste Warriors, with the support of Lal Family Foundation, initiated our

Outreach & Partnerships Program in Dehradun in late 2017. Our ground team of two,

supported by two office staff, directly engages Dehradun citizens, from household

residents to business owners and government authorities. We teach people the basics

of waste: the different categories and ways of segregation and composting, how

waste pollutes air, water, and soil, and ultimately how people can begin to make

small changes in their daily lives. All of this carries the greater potential to reverse

dangerous trash-related trends, such as mixed waste disposal, single-use plastic

consumption, microplastic accumulation, and air pollution. These are issues that are

directly affecting us now, and will continue to impact us in the future if little is done.

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From the start, our teams have been well aware of the limits to cleaning up litter

thrown by our fellow urban residents, from unaware adults to uninformed youth. Over

time, it had become vital to raise awareness amongst the public as fast as possible,

from all socioeconomic categories with no exception, in order to gradually change

their collective behaviour and sensitize them to the harms of mismanaged waste,

whether it is from littering, dumping or, even worse, open burning. There was growing

consensus that people actually did want to change, but there was very little

information on exactly what to do and how to do it.

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➔ To reduce the amount of waste being thrown onto the streets in Dehradun by promoting waste collection on a community and household level.

➔ To reduce the amount of waste going to the municipal trenching grounds by encouraging segregation at source, proper disposal, and composting.

➔ To promote waste collection at household and community levels to reduce the amount of waste being dumped onto the streets of Dehradun.

➔ To raise levels of awareness on the harms of mixed waste and littering, dumping, and burning, and importance of holistic solid waste management (SWM).

➔ To improve communications and strengthen relationships with all stakeholders, especially Urban Local Bodies who can implement key SWM policies.

➔ We partner and collaborate on collection and awareness initiatives with:

◆ Municipal Corporation, Environmental Protection and Pollution Control Board, Urban Development Directorate, Uttarakhand Tourism Development Board & Forest Department.

◆ Active citizen groups/NGOs, including Rotary Club, Gati Foundation, etc.

➔ We organize and conduct awareness-raising events and training sessions for:

◆ Residential colonies, societies, apartments, and RWAs.

◆ Medium to big retail/hospitality/commercial businesses.

➔ We organize volunteer-driven clean-up drives and beautification initiatives.

Our Objectives

Our Methods

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Working Around Doon

Com t Wor hat G h Pa

ID ar n V tfo s ic s

Cle -Up oRa s A a n

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Our Opportunities

After years of our direct action initiatives through clean-up drives and public space transformations, there was a clear need to raise public awareness directly with households and businesses. Despite the scale of Dehradun’s waste issues, we saw these as areas of opportunity for us to implement a public engagement and policy advocacy program. Here is why we initiated this program:

For years across Dehradun, as is the case in countless places in India, there has been rampant open dumping and burning of mixed solid waste, especially various types of plastics. There is a clear lack of awareness on the harmful nature of such toxic and carcinogenic pollution on air, water, and soil. Mitigating this was a high priority endeavor.

It is quite apparent from any open dumpsite that the majority of Dehradun never segregates their household or business waste into dry and wet, let alone into recyclable, non-recyclable, and organic. There is a clear need to engage and inform household residents and business owners on the importance of waste segregation at source and the simplicity of composting food waste.

Apart from our entire team of dedicated individuals, there certainly are small groups of active and informed citizens across Dehradun who do segregate and compost their waste, and who are in need of support. This could be in the form of waste pick-ups, providing information on types of bins to segregate and pots to compost or awareness materials for further clarity, or even supporting them to discuss waste management with their neighbors and housing societies.

The informal waste recycling sector operates on a massive scale across India, and here in Dehradun, there are hundreds of waste pickers, most of whom work for many hours every day to earn a living for themselves and their families. There is a real need to improve their tough working conditions to mitigate injuries and diseases that are spread through tons of mixed waste, from municipal to biomedical to hazardous. In order to formalize waste pickers and initiate and extend even the most basic levels of support, we needed to collaborate with authorities like the Nagar Nigam and the Pollution Control Board.

● Ope D p an B n

● Seg ti d Co s g

● Sup t Ac i C ti s

● For zi W s i k

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I’m proud that this program gives us the

opportunity to talk to actual Doon citizens

about something they’d least like to discuss:

trash. When we visit residents, they

appreciate our work and also now

understood its urgency. We simplify and

connect bigger issues of climate change

with simple but misunderstood acts of

dumping or burning waste in neighborhoods.

We are able to identify emotional triggers of different communities, which we use effectively to

convey our message. I am most proud of our “Swachhta ke Sipahis”, active citizens who

spread waste awareness in neighborhoods where we conduct workshops on source

segregation and composting. These two things can reduce the huge burden on the Nagar

Nigam whose workers have to otherwise collect and dispose mixed waste with no hopes of

extracting recyclables. Our partnership with Nagar Nigam is a strong sign of our growing

mutual support with one among many government bodies.

Our Outreach Team

I believe our program to raise awareness on

source segregation in households is an

extension of our school education program

where we show school children the

importance of proper waste disposal. This

program has given our team a huge

opportunity to engage adults, the

decision-makers of families, to get them to

participate in the greater movement to

clean India. I believe that our program has

strengthened our presence in Dehradun and our hard work is truly appreciated and supported

by many active people who care about dealing with these issues. In the future, I’d like to

include more campaigns on reducing sanitary waste and promoting hygienic and sustainable

alternatives. I want to conduct more workshops on composting and get people to use earthen

pots and coco-peat, which are the basics for better composting.

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NA KU S A(Out h & Par r p Ma g )

AN C A L(Pro t A is t)

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Our Office Team

With our team reaching out to more

households and businesses than ever before,

I was by their side to help them write and

design awareness-raising material that was

curated to have better impact. I helped with

a variety of approaches, from graphics,

audio, and video, and put all this to practice

on the ground and on social media. We

simplified text, made printed material more

visual, focused on emotional appeal than data points. Ultimately, people connect with what

they can relate to: their own lives, their family and friends, and their neighborhoods. At the

other end, I helped improve how we showcase our work in the form of reports, updates, press

releases, and social media campaigns. With these efforts, I see a bright future where our work

is expanded to cover thousands of families and businesses in Dehradun, a booming city where

such awareness-raising efforts are in desperate need.

I focused on streamlining our team’s

implementation and monitoring processes,

and bringing a strategic approach to

long-term sustainability. Our team built

partnerships with govt. agencies through the

waste pickers ID card initiative, building

compost enclosures across the city, as well

as becoming a member of the Uttarakhand

Urban Development Directorate State Level

Advisory Body, and more. Our team engaged 33 RWAs and apartments, supervising dry waste

collection from 12 of them via a Nagar Nigam truck, and raised awareness amongst 50+

businesses on source segregation, dustbin usage, and mitigating waste burning. Our next focus

is to evaluate our impact through surveys, RWA discussions, and official meetings, and to

effectively plan the next phase. My vision for this program is not just the numbers but to create

an ecosystem of waste management which will be decentralised and replicable.

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MI N AS AR(Pro m M a r)

C I G AJ(Com ca s Ma r)

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For many years, the public and bulk waste generators illegally threw and dumped waste in Jakhan Forest. This was building up to an ecological disaster as tons of mixed waste including non-recyclable plastics piled up. After two years of repeated efforts, the Forest Dept. finally agreed to fence illegally accessible areas, assign a guard to patrol the area, place signboards to ditter dumping, and request the Nagar Nigam to clean existing dumpsites.

We’re seeing signs of improvement for the first time as the patrol guards are catching illegal dumpers and the existing dumpsites are being cleaned up.

We have estimated there could be over 800 waste pickers in our city, all of whom work informally in tough conditions without any basic equipment, putting their health and safety at high risk to disease and injury. With the support of Dehradun Nagar Nigam, Uttarakhand Environmental Protection and Pollution Control Board, and Urban Development Directorate, we invited two groups of 50 waste pickers each to two events at the town hall.

We distributed official photo ID cards and safety equipment including safety gloves, caps, reflective jackets, boots, and dust-masks to each waste picker. Those who were invited but could not attend will still be able to collect the IDs and equipment from us. We have also initiated discussions on health insurance and other schemes that will be beneficial for the waste pickers. We continue to reach out to more waste pickers to ensure safety and dignity for all.

Our Success Stories

Empowering Doon Waste Pickers

Saving Jakhan Forest from Waste Dumping

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Our Success Stories

We were among our fellow active citizens when a petition signed by 560 people was submitted to the District Magistrate. It urged for a complete ban on polythene bags and disposable plastic and styrofoam items. Single-use products are used for mere minutes compared to the near permanence in our environment after being littered and dumped. The DM asked petitioners to implement recommended actions in certain wards. In August, the authorities initiated stricter actions to seize polythene bags from city wholesalers and retailers. Much more awareness has to be raised and this is why our team is simultaneously conducting residential awareness events and training workshops.

“ Even though I try hard not to bring any plastic home, like by

taking my cloth bag to buy fruits, there are others who do bring things home end up bringing plastic bags. But I always wash and dry the dirty bags before giving them to Waste Warriors . . .

I feel that this problem can be solved bit by bit. Even though there are sights that can bring frustration like our choking drains, if we stop our efforts now then think of how many thousands of plastic bags will add on to those sights. This is why we have to keep doing it. We are doing it now so that others will soon be more

aware. ”- Pushpa (one of many Swachhta ke Sipahi)

Swachhata ke Sipahi are our greatest ambassadors! After learning from our awareness events or hearing about us, people personally visit our office to drop off their clean dry waste. These active citizens also take a lead in approaching us to organize awareness events in their RWAs, and are also working to educate their family and neighbors around them.

Plastic

Ban!

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On October 2nd, India Today presented Waste Warriors Society with a Safaigiri 2018 Award for being a ‘Community Mobiliser’, one of 15 awards presented to NGOs working across India. Our Chief Operations Officer Avinash Pratap Singh had a moment on stage to discuss the importance of raising awareness amongst children and adults alike, and collaborating with local municipal and forest authorities to advocate for sustainable solid waste management initiatives. The award was presented by Honorable Minister Nitin Gadkari, and Mr. Aroon Purie, Chairman and Editor-in-Chief, India Today Group, to our Board Treasurer Gaurav Aggarwal, COO Avinash Pratap Singh, and Communications Manager Chirag Mahajan.

One of the most important aspects of this entire program was our awareness-raising workshops that have reached 3,106 households in 35 RWAs, housing societies, and apartments across the city. We partnered with Nagar Nigam who to get a segregated truck to start dry waste collection from around 12 RWAs where it was feasible to collect. Our team member supervises the pick-up, and we’ve created an audio track mixed with song and voiceover to alert residents that the truck has arrived for people to bring out our LFF-branded waste sacks. In addition to that, we coordinate with each participating RWA via WhatsApp groups, and residents really appreciate it when they are informed of the date and time of the pick-up truck in advance.

Our Success Stories

Dry Waste Pick-Up with Nagar Nigam

India Today Safaigiri Award 2018 - “Community Mobilisers”

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Memorable Events

On Gandhi Jayanti, 2nd October 2018, our team paid tribute to Mahatma Gandhi and his empowering vision of a clean and healthy India that we share as the driving force of our organization. We organized an awareness raising event on minimizing waste generation, promoting waste segregation, and composting food waste. We teamed up with Dehradun Nagar Nigam to conduct a clean-up drive around Ashley Hall with the help of our Green Workers and Nagar Nigam sweeping staff. In addition to Mr. Neeraj Joshi, Dy. Commissioner, Dehradun Nagar Nigam, we were honored by the presence of honorable Uttarakhand Chief Minister Trivendra Singh Rawat ji who took time out of his busy schedule to listen to our message and praise our efforts in promoting cleanliness amongst the citizens of Dehradun.

Celebrating Gandhi Jayanti with Honbl. CM Rawat at Gandhi Park

Our staff and amazing volunteers managed the waste generated at the three-day Rajpur Nature Festival 2018. We worked with the organizers to minimise single-use plastics, and they supported our setup of labelled waste bins across the beautiful Christian Retreat Centre. Event vendors were given reusable sacks for their dry waste, and we made sure every big bin was lined with biodegradable sacks and manned by our volunteers. We were honored by the presence of Mr. Jairaj, PCCF Uttarakhand who visited our awareness booth to learn more about raising awareness on the basics of waste management as well as simple do-it-yourself methods showing citizens that change begins with small steps both in and out of their homes.

Forest Dept. PCCF Jairaj at Rajpur Nature Festival 2018

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Official Testimonials

Mr. S. A. Murugesan, District Magistrate, Dehradun

Mr. Neeraj Joshi, Dy. Commissioner, Dehradun Nagar Nigam

Waste Warriors Society, an NGO formed in 2012, is a very well known name in Dehradun now. They are doing a good job in solid waste management and they give complete information and solutions about the waste process, from schools to homes, such as how to reduce your waste at source, how to recycle it, and how to compost it. Not only do they explain all this to the public, they are also involved in direct action like clean-up drives, wall murals, dry leaves composting, and event management.

I am happy to share that composting enclosures were made by Waste Warriors at the District Magistrate residence and the office of the District Magistrate, and the dry leaves were maintained and processed to make compost, which I found out is a very good and simple method to convert organic waste. Their staff are also checking the composting enclosures from time to time to see how the process is going. They are doing a fantastic job for creating awareness amongst kids as well as elders, and this good work should continue. I express my warmest greetings to the organization and their employees.

Waste Warriors has conducted a number of programs with Nagar Nigam like the rag-picker identification and kit distribution program, segregated waste collection from RWAs, composting enclosures set-up. It is commendable work which other NGOs can look up to. We are also partnering with Waste Warriors for the city-wide survey of rag-pickers to collect their information for the program’s next phase. I look forward to continuous partnership with Waste Warriors and give my best wishes to the team.

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Mr. S. P. Subudhi, Member Secretary, UEPPCB

Waste Warriors Society is doing a very good job in Dehradun, especially in the field of the plastic and electronic waste segregation and collection. Municipal Corporation has no separate waste collection system or any criteria for raising such awareness. In July 2018, Nagar Nigam gave Waste Warriors the responsibility to raise awareness amongst public and educate them on recyclable and non-recyclable waste, and has also provided one vehicle to their team. I have checked their collection myself and found it working well. They not only educate the public, they also collect the plastic and e-waste from different societies and also processed it completely. Although they are now working on a small scale for plastic and e-waste collection. I hope and wish that soon they will do this for entire Dehradun, and later on for the whole of Uttarakhand. Wish your team a bright future.

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Unfortunately wherever you look there is plastic, and whatever was useful for animals to eat is now getting completely wasted . . . Thanks to your yellow bags, we now segregate our plastic and glass, etc . . .

I definitely feel I’m doing my two cents and making people aware, too. When new neighbours moved in, I informed them and gave bags. But I can’t tell everyone so it’s so important that you keep at it to convert more people. Those who’re conscious of the problem and want to do something can change much faster. Those who aren't aware need to be reminded several times from different people before they change.

- Anita, Anand Legacy Apt.

Our Doon Warriors

Was riof S t Vi

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Our Doon Warriors

Was ri f Gre e Ap .

Was ri f Kew ar

Was ri f Gur a

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Our Impact

RWAs, Societies, Apts. 35

Households Reached 3,106

Waste Sacks Distributed 884

Small and Large Businesses 96

Awareness-Raising Events 33

Training Workshops 23

Workshop Participants 4,041

Swachhta Ke Sipahi 68

Recyclables & E-waste Truck Waste

1,221 kg

Community Engagement

Local Partnerships

Clean-ups & Beautification

Murals Painted 20

Clean-ups Conducted 16

Schools Participated 12

Total Volunteers 619

Waste Collected 730 kg

Nagar Nigam Programs 6

Programs with Other Orgs. 4

Waste Pickers Equipped 116

Composting Enclosures Built with Nagar Nigam

31

Plastic Ban Petitioners 560

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Impact Assessment

After our immense efforts to cover 33 RWAs, societies, and apartments and reach 2,966 households in Dehradun, our team surveyed these residents to reflect on the actual impact of our awareness-raising and community engagement work. These are our survey results from 297 household respondents, who represent 1353 family members.

87%now understand the difference between compostable, recyclable, and non-recyclable waste.

13% are still not sure.

46%are now aware of easy

ways to compost organic waste in their own home.

but 44% are still unsure.

95%know whom to contact if

their household waste is not being collected.

only 5% do not know!

91%sell recyclable items from their household waste to kabaadiwalas.

only 9% do not sell it.

97%felt the training and support provided by Waste Warriors was helpful.

only 3% felt it wasn’t.

74%now segregate their

household waste into dry and wet categories.

71% use reusable bags!

17%segregate their waste into compostable, recyclable, and non-recyclable bins.

9% don’t segregate at all.

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Our Challenges

Despite the best intentions and comprehensive implementation of our awareness-raising and policy advocacy program, the scale and range of Dehradun’s waste management issues have presented a variety of challenges for our team. These are some of the challenges we have faced so far:

Following up with all the 33 RWAs and apartments has presented its own challenges. Residents who participate in our workshops are usually excited about the idea. We help them develop a sense of personal responsibility towards their waste, and the regular supporting posts on the WhatsApp groups do act as reminders. But it is impossible for our team to walk every one through the basics of segregation and composting on a daily basis to help them do their part.

If only a few RWA households actively segregate waste but most of their neighbors do not, it is not feasible to send our truck to collect that small amount of waste. This is why we are only able to actively collect from 12 active RWAs from the 33 we have conducted workshops in. The tapering response from residents has to be tackled on a regular basis to allow us to make the collection feasible.

60% of household waste on average is organic and can be composted. But residents have to take the initiative to actively separate dry and wet waste at source. We found that many residents, especially those in apartments, did not want to take this up, despite our efforts to show them how easy it can be with the help of a simple matka or any large aerated container.

Although we have distributed official photo ID cards and safety equipment to 116 waste pickers, there are many more who still work in hazardous conditions. With over at least 800 waste pickers in Dehradun who are always on the move, it has been very challenging for our team to effectively reach out and establish a relationship with them, as that requires much more dedicated time and effort from our small team to find, discuss, and build significant relationships with them.

● Fol n U Wit eh s

● Col t Fro E r R A

● Com t Or a c W e

● Sup t Mor e c s

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One of the key elements of planning and implementing this awareness program is a good monitoring and evaluation system in place. Our Project Manager was able to set up such a system using Google’s cloud-based tools, which allowed the Outreach & Partnerships team to keep track of their work in one place, enabling them to check their progress. This give us the real-time status of their project’s activities and data, helping us better monitor and evaluate the program’s outputs and targets, and shift our focus as needed.

Our key highlights have been our growing partnerships with Dehradun Nagar Nigam, Forest Department, and other government agencies. We aimed to do three programs with Nagar Nigam when we started, but by December 2018 we had conducted 10 such programs.

The two-phase waste pickers ID card program was very well received by Nagar Nigam, and we’re now entrusted to conduct surveys of 800+ waste pickers and their families in Dehradun. The intention is to provide them basic identification and safety equipment, as well as linking them and their families with potential government health and insurance programs.

Another highlight was Nagar Nigam’s support to collect from housing colonies through their truck and manpower. This partnership not only saved us operational costs but also has the potential to sustain this program in the near future as we handover the initiative to them.

Our compost enclosures partnership with Nagar Nigam has allowed us to set up 30+ enclosures in public parks and other Nagar Nigam locations. This number will grow in 2019 with more enclosure projects lined up.

Waste Warriors was also included as the only NGO member of a State Level Advisory Board (SLAB), initiated by Urban Development Directorate Uttarakhand. We’ve proud to have had such a successful year of partnerships and we intend to further these with more waste management and awareness programs and engagements with other government agencies.

Program Developments

Collaborating with Dehradun Nagar Nigam

Program Monitoring & Evaluation Support

● Was ke ID ro m

● Par r to C c Wa t

● Set g U Co p n E c o r

● In us i n A so B r

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Our Communications Manager has been supporting the awareness and advocacy efforts of the O&P team by greatly improving the IEC (Information, Education, Communication) content and designs, with special focus on consistent branding and information-sharing across our projects, and on social media platforms. From all our print materials, such as our grant activity reports, awareness presentations, event banners and posters, and to social media content, every major part has been redesigned to better reflect our efforts, our impact, and, most importantly, our values as a dedicated team of social changemakers.

Program Developments

Supporting Our SWM Operations Team

Communications and Design Support

Our Operations team is the backbone and support system of our waste management work, from collecting dry waste from businesses across the city, transporting equipment to awareness-raising events, picking up collected waste after clean-ups, to even sieving compost out of our enclosures. This year, our operations team has managed to set-up a small-scale and functional waste segregation facility, employing two women who’ve been trained to segregate our collected dry waste, at a rate of 1 ton per day, into different recyclable categories to sell to partnering scrap dealers.

After running on an operational deficit for many years – partially funded by grant money and service-based donations to cover our labour costs – the operations team has now grown the number of clients they provide services to 67, by connecting with businesses that the Outreach & Partnerships team has conducted awareness programs for. This has helped them streamline their waste collection operations and cover their cost of operations.

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Tha to L il F da !

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Given the magnitude of Dehradun’s waste management issues, it was quite clear that the city’s residents and its administration needed both systemic and behavioral change approaches. Our team’s comprehensive awareness and advocacy program took these steps and our efforts are now bearing fruit and showing its impact across multiple fronts. Our entire Dehradun team at Waste Warriors Society would like to extend our deep gratitude and appreciation to Lal Family Foundation for their generous support of our work. This gratitude comes not only from our team, but also straight from Dehradun’s residents and businesses

who we have constantly engaged, who participated in our workshops, and who are now much more aware than before.We hope to continue our mission to raise awareness on the harms of waste pollution and the importance of waste management, and we will do our best to ensure that as many households and businesses as possible understand their responsibilities towards their waste and will segregate, compost, and encourage their family and neighbors to do the same. We thank you for helping us make a difference in the lives of the citizens of Dehradun, and for supporting our vision of a cleaner India.

Page 25: Waste Warriors - Our Efforts || Our Impact · 2020. 6. 18. · municipal solid waste every day. That is a huge amount and, ... towards integrating the unorganized waste sector into
Page 26: Waste Warriors - Our Efforts || Our Impact · 2020. 6. 18. · municipal solid waste every day. That is a huge amount and, ... towards integrating the unorganized waste sector into

[email protected]

@wastewarriors1

www.wastewariors.org

+91 78952 67144

Waste Warriors Society

71A/386, Balaji House Lane

Dilaram Chowk, Rajpur Road,

Dehradun, Uttarakhand, 248001

Waste Warriors is registered under the Indian Societies Act 1860 - 243/2012-2013Registered Address: 24 Pritam Road, Dalanwala, Dehradun, 248001

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REDUCE | REUSE | RECYCLE