Waste Picker Enumeration App (2025): Profiling, ID cards, PM-JAY insurance, PPE kits, collectives for 750 DWCCs.
Waste Pickers added (2024): Recognised as contributors to circular economy, linked with financing, skill development, and formal waste chain integration.
Overview
Social Dimension: Restores dignity of sanitation workers, integrates them into formal systems, reduces caste-based occupational marginalisation.
Economic Dimension: Transforms workers into entrepreneurs, ensures steady livelihoods, and formalises waste economy.
Health Dimension: Expands preventive healthcare + health insurance, reducing occupational morbidity/mortality.
Technological Dimension: Focus on mechanisation, PPE, digital enumeration, and monitoring tools for transparency.
Environmental Dimension: Sustainable solid waste management via formal waste picker inclusion, supports recycling and resource recovery.
Governance Dimension: Inter-ministerial convergence ensures policy coherence; MIS enhances accountability.
Human Rights Dimension: Directly addresses Supreme Court rulings against manual scavenging, aligns with SDG 6 (Clean Water & Sanitation) and SDG 8 (Decent Work).
Conclusion
NAMASTE is India’s first holistic sanitation worker welfare scheme, combining safety, dignity, livelihood, and environmental justice.
By mechanising sanitation, extending health & financial security, and integrating waste pickers, it represents a paradigm shift from exploitation to empowerment.
Success depends on:
Effective ULB-level implementation.
Continuous monitoring via MIS & App tools.
Community participation & awareness.
Positions India as a model for inclusive sanitation reform globally.