Key Points

The Indian government has made significant strides in rural sanitation, with 5.66 lakh villages declared Open Defecation Free Plus. Minister V. Somanna revealed detailed criteria for ODF Plus status across three village categories. Uttar Pradesh leads the national efforts with the highest number of ODF Plus villages. The Swachh Bharat Mission continues to prioritize sustainable sanitation and waste management in rural areas.

Key Points: Somanna Reveals 5.66 Lakh ODF Plus Villages Nationwide

  • 5.86 lakh total villages tracked for sanitation progress
  • Uttar Pradesh leads with 94,636 ODF Plus villages
  • Three categories of ODF Plus status defined
  • Swachh Bharat Mission Phase II focuses on waste management
3 min read

5.66 lakh villages out of nation's 5.86 lakh sustaining ODF status: MoS

Minister V. Somanna highlights India's sanitation progress with 96.6% villages achieving Open Defecation Free Plus status

"Sanitation is a continuous process, not a one-time activity - V. Somanna, MoS Jal Shakti"

New Delhi, Aug 18

As many as 5.66 lakh villages out of a total of 5.86 lakh villages have been declared Open Defecation Free (ODF) Plus till August 13, the Rajya Sabha was informed on Monday.

Minister of State for Jal Shakti V. Somanna, in a written reply, said an ODF Plus village is defined as a village which sustains its Open Defecation Free (ODF) status, ensures solid and liquid waste management and is visually clean.

He said Uttar Pradesh has the maximum number of 94,636 ODF Plus villages, followed by 50,772 in Madhya Pradesh, 45,083 in Odisha, 42,781 in Rajasthan, 38,300 in Maharashtra and 37,178 in West Bengal.

Sharing the procedural details of claiming ODF Plus village status, MoS Somanna said a village that has met all the ODF Plus criteria will self-declare itself ODF Plus at a Gram Sabha meeting.

He said there are three categories (Aspiring/Rising/Model) of ODF Plus villages.

The district must ensure mandatory third-party verification of a village, within 90 days of ODF Plus declaration for the first time, he said.

The mandatory third-party verification will be undertaken for ODF Plus (Model) villages only; however, supervisory verification may be done for the ODF Plus villages across all three categories (Aspiring/Rising/Model) by the officers responsible in the chain of command at Block/District/State levels.

He said an ODF Plus Aspiring village is one which is sustaining its ODF status and has arrangements for Solid Waste Management OR Liquid Waste Management.

An ODF Plus Rising village is one which is sustaining its ODF status and has arrangements for both Solid Waste Management and Liquid Waste Management, he said.

An ODF Plus Model village is one which is sustaining its ODF status and has arrangements for both Solid Waste Management and Liquid Waste Management; observes visual cleanliness like minimal litter, minimal stagnant wastewater, no plastic waste dump in public places; and displays ODF Plus Information, Education and Communication (IEC) messages, the MoS said.

Somanna said sanitation is a State subject and the Department of Drinking Water and Sanitation provides Financial and technical support to States.

He said the Phase II of Swachh Bharat Mission (Grameen) [SBM(G)] is being implemented between 2020-21and 2025-26, with the focus on ODF sustainability and to cover all the villages with solid and liquid waste management - converting the villages from ODF to ODF Plus (Model).

Realising that the task of constructing toilets is a continuous process and not a one time activity, as there are continuously new emerging households, migrant households which will require toilets, construction of new Individual House Hold Latrines (IHHLs) continues to be the first charge on SBM(G) funds under Phase-II of the Mission, the MoS said.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Shreya B
While the numbers look impressive, I wonder about ground reality. In my district of Bihar, many toilets built under SBM are unused because there's no water supply. The government should focus on water availability too.
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Aditya G
UP leading with 94k+ villages is surprising but welcome news! Shows what political will can achieve. Hope other states learn from their model. The focus on waste management is crucial for long-term cleanliness.
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Priyanka N
The categorization into Aspiring/Rising/Model villages is smart. It creates healthy competition among panchayats. In Tamil Nadu, our village is working hard to reach Model status - we've started composting and wastewater treatment.
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Karan T
Good initiative but maintenance is key. Many toilets built under SBM are already broken. Government should allocate funds for repairs too. Also need more awareness about hygiene in rural areas.
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Nisha Z
The real test will be sustaining this. My concern is migrant workers who move seasonally - how will they maintain toilet habits when they return to villages? Need continuous IEC as mentioned in article.

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