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Fines for littering on tarmac

“Offenders littering parking bays at Mumbai Airport are fined Rs 500 while those found dumping garbage on perimeter roads or the airfield have to pay Rs 200,” says a spokesperson, reports Soubhik Mitra.

Updated on: Sep 06, 2008 12:25 AM IST
Hindustan Times | By , Mumbai
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The city’s strays have a new hunting ground the airport.

HT Image
HT Image

Litter mainly food leftovers carelessly dumped on the airfield — is drawing dogs to the runway, forcing flights to hover, go-around and, in worst cases, divert to other airports.

Leftover sandwiches, samosas and other foodstuff left on food trays are indirectly responsible for flights hovering in the city skies, officials said.

Since January, Mumbai International Airport Limited (MIAL) has been forced to employ a team of 30 people — they’re called ‘dog catchers’ — to keep strays out of the airfield.

In eight months, dog catchers have captured 320 strays — two dogs a day, on an average. The private consortium started penalising people found littering the airfield in March.

The proposal to penalise people littering the airfield was mooted on Environment Day.

“We get about four offenders a month,” said an MIAL spokesperson.

Offenders comprise members of airlines, catering companies and oil suppliers. “Offenders littering parking bays are fined Rs 500 while those found dumping garbage on perimeter roads or the airfield have to pay Rs 200,” said the spokesperson.

Similarly, a landing plane crushed a dog at a point where the main and the cross runway intersect on August 29, forcing airport authorities to shut runway operations for 15 minutes.

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Soubhik Mitra

Soubhik Mitra is an assistant editor with the Hindustan Times. The Mumbai boy has spent over a decade reporting on civic, environmental and political issues. His current stint is the longest where he writes on aviation and travel.

Check India news real-time updates, latest news on Hindustan Times and more across India.
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