This is Juatenda Competition Essay First Runners Up by Fleare Medza Mtana. The Overall Best will be published next week. Read on
MINI-DUMPING SITES A THREAT TO OUR
ENVIRONMENT
Chuka
University is a learning institution that has seen its growth in a now hundred
year old town, Chuka Town. The university has attracted lots of investors
therefore raising the economic standards of the society. The locals have not
been left behind as they too hail the birth of the learning institution from
the farmers, to hostel owners, hotel industry name them. Since the school
started from being a polytechnic to now a fully certified University, the
number of students’ enrollment has enormously increased.
It
is said that everything that has advantages, got its disadvantages too and I
would say the same too. The fast growing university is becoming a major threat
to the environment without our notice. As the numbers increase, more hostels
and rental rooms for learners are constructed this means more land is being
cleared for putting up buildings, more trees are cut for construction and more
earth bricks are being made.
However
that is just a tip of an iceberg, one most important component that I would
address is refuse disposal. In most
of the hostels, the caretakers and the landlords are creating mini-dumping
sites where students can get rid of their waste materials. The picture below is
an example of a mini-dumping site.
Such
mini dumping sites are used as solution to avoiding littering everywhere but in
the long run they will cause more damage than good.
First
it is that the students who are provided with such areas dispose any type of
waste into the pits and sometimes the stay for a long time before burning the
dirt. This then becomes messy especially during windy days. Some of the
materials that are disposed are then blown away into other areas. An example is
a pad below that has been blown away to a different area.
It is evident that the user had not planned to
dispose it to such a place but because of the open pits this area is being
forced to welcome this foreign material.
Another
problem that arising from such mini dumping sites is that in some of the students
residential they are becoming such huge humps of dirt. A dumping site like the
Dandora dumping site must have started this way, at one time it must have been
a small place for throwing garbage before it became a huge dirty and filthy
hill. In Chuka next to the school’s male hostels there is one of such
mini-dumping site that is now growing higher and higher and if left unattended
it may grow to become a huge dumping site.
This
trend is spreading across the school environment and even the market has not been
left behind. Businesses are booming and salonists, barbers and vegetable
sellers too have their own mini dumpsites. Waste matters such as hair,
vegetable waste are being thrown in the open since there are no dustbins for
collecting the provided by the municipal council.
The
issues with such mini dumping sites is that some may be left to fill for long
periods causing hygienic problems or even rotting producing a foul smell adding
up to air pollution.
In
addition as the rainy season begins, more harm is expected from these sites.
They become breeding grounds for harmful insects such as houseflies which
spread germs and diseases.
Burning
of plastic materials such as bottles and polythene bags pollutes cause air
pollution. These issues can be addressed in different ways. First it is to remind students what dangers
lie ahead of them and the dangers of disposing garbage in such a manner.
Plastic bottles can be reused especially by the local milk vendors who use
polythene bags to pack milk for their customers instead of throwing them.
Students
are known to be using beverages such as soda and alcoholic drinks. The glass
bottles that are out of use should be collected and taken back to the
industries for recycling.
Students
should also organize with the locals on a safer method of disposing organic
materials. Organic matter such as vegetables and food left over can be used as
animal feeds since most locals are livestock keepers. Such materials can be
used to feed animals such as goats, cows, dogs, chicken and pigs. Organic
material can also be used as manure for the farms when left to decompose.
Papers can then be burnt as they have been disposed to avoid them from being
spread to other areas.
Students
should learn to separate different refuse to make this easier for the land to
be maintained as it had been before and to conserve the environment.
Our
environment is our responsibility and as university students we ought to be
role models to the society. We should manage our ways of disposing waste if we
want to keep a clean county and a clean town. It demands cooperation and
commitment from all residents and passion to see that we live in a clean area.
Dirt should not be a normal culture that we are used to.
This
article addresses the whole country since as a country we have not all adapted
the culture of proper waste disposal. As this campaign addresses my county I
would also like to encourage all citizens to take into consideration such
methods and keep our country clean.
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