Aurangabad IAS officer slaps another Rs 5000-fine, this time for plastic gift wrapping
India

Aurangabad IAS officer slaps another Rs 5000-fine, this time for plastic gift wrapping

Aurangabad municipal commissioner Astik Kumar Pandey fined a BJP corporator for violating the Maharashtra govt's plastic ban. But the corporator said the item isn't listed as a banned product.

   
IAS officer Astik Kumar Pandey

IAS officer Astik Kumar Pandey took over as Aurangabad Municipal Corporation (AMC) commissioner | Facebook: Astik Kumar

Aurangabad: After a civic official, who was fined by the city’s new municipal commissioner for using plastic material, it was the turn of a BJP corporator to pay penalty for using gift paper.

Aurangabad municipal commissioner Astik Kumar Pandey, who took charge on Monday, had slapped a fine of Rs 5,000 on a civic official who came to welcome him with a bouquet that had plastic wrapping.

The official, Ramchandra Mahajan, an assistant director in the town planning department, had to pay the fine amount on the spot.

On Tuesday, BJP corporator Manisha Munde presented a pen packed in a gift paper to Pandey. The civic chief slapped a fine of Rs 5,000 on her for using the wrapper.

Munde was part of a BJP delegation, led by party leader Pramod Rathod, which went to welcome Pandey on taking charge. Pandey’s action annoyed the BJP delegation, but the fine was recovered on the spot.

Peeved at imposition of the fine, Munde said the delegation was beforehand told wrapping paper was not included in the list of banned plastic items.

Talking to media after the incident, she said the Aurangabad Municipal Corporation (AMC) till date has never taken any action against the use of gift paper.

“Before visiting him (Pandey), our activists consulted the chief of the solid waste disposal department, Nandkumar Bhombe, who said that wrapping paper was not included in the list of banned plastic materials,” Munde said.

“The only reason we paid the fine was not to let down the civic commissioner,” she said.

After slapping fine on Mahajan on Monday, Pandey had said, “This was a message to all those who use plastic in city. I am requesting everyone to stop use of single use plastic. But moves against it will be tightened in the days to come.”

Government offices across the country have been making efforts to ban single-use plastic items from their premises after a call for their elimination was made by Prime Minister Narendra Modi during his Independence Day speech this year.

In June last year, the Maharashtra government imposed a ban on a variety of plastic products, including single-use disposable items, and started penalising all those found using them.

It banned manufacturing, use, sale, distribution and storage of plastic materials such as bags, spoons, plates and other disposable items. The ban also included packaging material and thermocol.


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