#GoodNews: Village Only Certifies Marriage If It’s a Green Wedding

The initiative, which began last year, is called Malinyamillatha Mangalyam – ‘a wedding without waste’.

Megha Varier
India
Updated:
Image used for representational purposes.
i
Image used for representational purposes.
(Photo Courtesy: The News Minute)

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If you live in the Kolayadu gram panchayat in Kerala's Kannur district, chances are that you run the risk of being refused your marriage certificate for breaking one single rule. What could land you in such a crisis, you ask? The answer is simple: coming in the way of the panchayat's efforts to reduce plastic waste.

The Kolayadu gram panchayat, with a population of about 24,000 people, is in the process of implementing an initiative to cut down on non-biodegradable waste generated every day.

Realising that one of the major sources of plastic waste is weddings, the panchayat has now made it mandatory for all wedding functions to follow a green protocol. Failure to abide by this protocol would mean that one would be denied their marriage certificate.

The panchayat now insists on a document from a ward member attesting to the fact that the wedding was indeed free of plastic.

The initiative that began in November, last year, is called Malinyamillatha Mangalyam (which loosely translates to 'a wedding without waste').

A Model Village

Speaking to TNM, Kolayadu panchayat president Suresh said they brought out a notification in which a green protocol was made mandatory for weddings and other public functions.

The protocol says plastic should not be used for any function whatsoever. And if more than a 100 people are attending the function, then prior permission should be taken from the panchayat.

At one point, effective management of plastic waste was a major concern for our panchayat. When we started to think about means to tackle the issue, we realised that a majority of the plastic waste was being generated at weddings. People would just dump them on road sides, leading to birds and stray dogs feeding on them, which in turn lead to a foul smell in the neighbourhood.
Suresh

The protocol mandates that weddings should not use plastic to serve food or as decoration.

Even chocolate cannot be distributed at the wedding, since it is wrapped in plastic. Ice-cream and other desserts should not be served in disposable plates or cups.
Suresh

According to the protocol, families need to inform the panchayat well ahead of the wedding. The families are then be briefed by the panchayat and Kudumbashree officials on ways to cut down on plastic.

On the day of the wedding, the panchayat puts up a banner at the venue, announcing that the wedding is "green".

Any family that fails to follow the protocol gets fined up to Rs 10,000. Only after the ward member personally certifies that the wedding was indeed conducted in regulation with the green protocol is the marriage certificate issued.

As an alternative to disposable plates and cups, steel and glass utensils are now being used.

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We have made steel plates and glass utensils available at various centres in the panchayat (in clubs) so that the people can avail them. In many places, the utensils are given free of cost, but in some areas that isn’t possible.
Suresh

While Suresh proudly declares that most of the people in the panchayat have followed the protocol and that only a few people have defaulted so far, he admits that there was resistance from the public initially.

While some did not feel the need to cut down on plastic, others were apprehensive about having to clean all the steel/glass utensils used for the wedding function.

People turn to disposable plastic items because they are cheap, and can be used once and thrown off. There is no need to maintain them. So when we first told them to switch to glass or steel utensils, many families objected saying they cannot clean the vessels after use.
Suresh

However, when the panchayat offered to form a team that will take up the responsibility of cleaning the vessels after use, the families gave in.

Other Initiatives

The Kolayadu panchayat has also started an initiative in which non-biodegradable electronic waste is collected from homes and given to recycling units.

Households in all the 14 wards of the panchayat have been asked to segregate their glass/electronic waste and the panchayat collects them once a year.

Earlier this month, the panchayat also rolled out another initiative to encourage people to plant more trees. It made it mandatory for every new construction site to plant five trees. This is now the new criteria for obtaining construction permit from the panchayat.

They have to show us photographs of the trees in order to get the permit. Any construction will, on an average, take two years to complete. So once the project is completed, the panchayat has to issue a building number. For this, we insist that the owners apprise us about the current state of the trees they have planted at the beginning of the construction work.
Suresh

Officials believe that all these efforts will lead to the panchayat becoming a plastic-free zone in the years to come.

This article was originally published on The News Minute and has been republished here with permission.

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Published: 22 Feb 2018,06:16 PM IST

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