Livelihoods

When the pits fill up: A day in the life of sanitation workers in urban India

The photo essay traces the flow of waste from pit to dump in urban India, making visible the labour that produces the sanitary city.

Author : CS Sharada Prasad

India’s flagship sanitation programme, Swachh Bharat Mission (SBM), highlights both the importance of latrine use, and also of “safe and proper disposal”. Since most of urban India is not connected to sewers, the SBM recommends that cities work towards technological, financing and governance initiatives that would ensure safe faecal sludge management. In practice, this means mechanical (i.e. truck-and-hose) sludge removal as opposed to the now-illegal manual method of emptying toilet pits. But how do cleaners live and work? What do their days and nights demand of them? And to what extent does their work rely on India’s age-old caste system, about which SBM policies are silent? What, in other words, does the “backend” of Swachh Bharat look like in an Indian city? In this photo essay, we trace the flow of waste from pit to dump in urban India, making visible the labour that produces the sanitary city.i

It’s a typical December day in the lives of Deepak, Rajesh and Prabhu. They empty out septic tanks and soak pits for homes and businesses, they are all from the Maadiga (Dalit) community, and they have been at this job for three to five years. Deepak is driving a yellow Tata 909 truck fitted with a large cylindrical tank at the back. The men are going to a home in a middle-class neighbourhood, whose toilet has backed up because the pit is full.

It’s not hard for homeowners to find an emptying service when they need one. Truck owners paint the name and number of the service in large font and bright colours on the holding tanks and on city walls; the drivers carry business cards. They park at busy intersections where they can easily be seen while waiting for a service call. Fliers are distributed with the daily newspapers. The Yellow Pages carry advertisements. 

When the truck reaches the home, Rajesh and Prabhu jump out and try to locate the pit. It is covered by a concrete slab and it’s under a foot of soil. They find the slab and pry it open to insert the hose. The other end of the hose is attached to a vacuum pump. On Prabhu’s signal, Deepak starts the truck engine which gets the pump started. In a few minutes, the pit is empty. Prabhu and Rajesh work quickly to coil the hose back on the hook attached to the tank. 

The men work with bare hands and have flip-flops on their feet. They say that the gloves and boots in the market are not designed for the kind of job they do, and they do not want to scare the public. “We don’t wear gloves or masks. Wearing them makes people think that our work and the waste we carry in our truck are dangerous. So we act normal as if it is harmless. That also makes dumping it a lot easier.”

The crucial part of this business is dumping the sludge, and it isn’t easy to find discreet dumping spots. Deepak says that Prabhu is an expert at finding suitable spots, but Prabhu modestly demurs. He just gets lucky, he says. Open and dry plots in the periphery of the city are always good, he explains, the soil dries fast and doesn’t hold the smell for long. 

The large stormwater drains that carry water out of the city—raja kaluve—already carry sewage, and the main sewer lines can also be accessed from side alleys all over the city’s outer edges. The cleaners have to be quick if they use the main sewer lines, though since they could be reported to the city. Finally, there are farmlands—dumping sludge on a fallow farm is a safe option for the operator. This is a good option for smaller cities like Guntur or Dharwad but Bangalore has urbanised so rapidly that there are not many farmlands in the periphery anymore. 

Rainy days are the best but rainy nights are even better. “We find a road that is flooded,” says Deepak. “We park the truck, attach a short pipe to the drain valve and lower it just enough to submerge it, then we open the valve and let the sludge mix with the rainwater.” Don’t people notice the sludge coming out of the pipe? “No, not really. The rainwater is muddy and flooded roads have slow traffic—people are completely focused on driving.” Sometimes vigilante groups, calling themselves the “public”, take videos, curse (“they say we are soolemakluii), and threaten to call the police. But mostly the sanitation workers are left alone. “Who has the patience to stop their vehicle in ankle-deep water, wade through sewage, come to us, and ask?”

This morning, it’s not raining and the truck stops right in front of an open drain outside the city proper. Rajesh and Prabhu connect the PVC pipe to the draining end of the tank and open the valve. In eight minutes, gravity empties the tank. 

The next stop is the septic tank of one of India’s best known companies. That tank is large—eight to 10 trips will be needed to empty it. If a man isn’t careful, he could fall into the pool of sludge and die. Cleaners do, every year. Rajesh connects the end of the pipe to the pump. Prabhu ties a five-foot long iron bar to the end of the pipe and submerges it into the sludge. The bar acts as a mixer. Deepak starts up the pump and the truck tank fills up in about 12 minutes. Then the men are out on the road with the first load of sludge. No one has washed his hands.

Once the third load has been dumped into an open drain, Deepak takes a swig of whiskey, Rajesh and Prabhu share a packet of gutkha.iii

Deepak says that everyone he knows drinks. “I drink even when I don’t work.” Prabhu, too: “But I only drink when I am home. I eat gutkha when I work.” And Rajesh? “No. I don’t drink. I just eat gutkha.” 

The men are almost done with emptying the fourth load of sludge when a police jeep passes and stops. Deepak gets out and walks towards the jeep. In a couple of minutes, Deepak is back. “Those people want their share.” He sounds matter-of-fact. “We pay them the mamool ivwhen they see us or when we go home past the police station.” 

Urgent calls are answered during the day, pretty much all day, the cleaners said, but certain pre-arranged cleanings are done during the night. Elite hotels, especially, want the septic tanks cleaned at night. They do not want their guests to see or smell the operations. Tonight the men have been called in by a “large, posh” hotel. “People pay Rs 10,000 per day to stay in the hotel, and their shit smells just like everybody else’s,” says Prabhu. He thinks it will be almost 5 am before the men can go home. 

Suctioning faecal waste via a hose and pump is progress over manual scavenging in which faeces are cleaned using hand-held tools and carried away in a cart. The three men know that. They also know that the job of working with sludge is still left to a sub-section of Dalits. It’s risky work, they are disgusted by the waste they handle, they need alcohol and opioids to numb the senses, there is no protection, there are no benefits. But, they agreed, there is a small measure of job security. “The job security we have is our caste. Other castes will not do this work.” 

 
[i] This photo-essay is not a product of one specific day in one specific city but is a composite illustration of the several days and evenings that Sharada Prasad spent with truck operators in Bangalore, Dharwad and Guntur. A detailed recounting of their work can be found in Economic and Political Weekly, May 26 2018All photographs received informed consent for publication from our interviewees, but Deepak, Rajesh and Prabhu are composite characters. No actual named individuals are included in these pictures.
[ii] Soolemaklu: in Kannada, “sons of whores”
[iii] Gutkha is a mix of areca nuts, seeds, herbs and tobacco. It produces a “buzz” when chewed.
[iv] Mamool: in Kannada, “the usual”
 

About the Authors

CS Sharada Prasad, the photographer, is an assistant professor at the Azim Premji University, Bengaluru. Isha Ray is an associate professor at the Energy & Resources Group and co-director of the Berkeley Water Center.
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