13 June,2012 06:56 AM IST | | Rinkita Gurav and Anuradha Varanasi
A committee appointed by the civic body to survey toilet facilities for women in the city, in its report, has revealed that most ladies toilets lack basic amenities, women are charged extra for usage, and most of them are exclusively for men. The report submitted to the civic body last week states that number of women leaving home for work, education, and other social purposes has increased over the years, and this necessitates the need to build more public toilets.
The âRight to Pee' committee along with civic officials surveyed 129 toilet blocks between November 2011 and March 2012 in M-West, M-East, N, G-South and G-North wards. According to the report, the most critical aspect that came to light was that toilets should have free urinals, but attendants were found to be charging users anywhere between Rs 2 to Rs 5 for urinals. It was also revealed that most of the toilets were unclean and didn't have basic facilities like water and electricity. Moreover, toilet blocks that have to be provided with soap, mirror, dustbins, and washbasins, according to BMC rules, didn't have any, and the ones that did have them were not in a usable condition. The interiors had stains and garbage lay strewn around. At some toilets, offensive images were visible on the walls. The drainage system was dysfunctional with water spewing on the floor. According to the rules, the toilets must have complaint registers, which were not found anywhere.
"All the reasons and findings stated in the report are correct and we have already begun working towards it. Other international cities have first class public toilets and we do not even have basic facilities here. And the ones we do have are not being maintained well. We would also set up sanitary napkin machines for women in each toilet, which is another basic necessity," said BMC's Standing Committee Chairman Rahul Shewale who had proposed building of toilets for women after a delegation of women from 39 NGOs had launched a campaign to demand better public toilet facilities for women.
He further mentioned that the committee has suggested repair work to some toilet blocks and suggested building blocks for women around the existing ones. For a city that requires 34,000 public toilets there are only 10,500, most of which are exclusively for men. To change this situation the civic body had asked a group of NGOs to carry out the survey and recommend the number of toilets and the kind of system required for women.
34,000
Number of public toilets required for the city
10,500
No of public toilets constructed in the cityu00a0
Glaring discrepancies
Of the total 1,770 toilet seats, 1,033 are for men and only 737 for women.
Of the 121 bathrooms, 86 are for men and 35 for women. All the 419 urinals were only reserved for men.u00a0