NEW DELHI — The Union Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment has announced that it will commemorate the 3rd NAMASTE Day on July 14, 2026, marking three years since the inception of the landmark National Action for Mechanized Sanitation Ecosystem (NAMASTE) Scheme.
The national flagship event will be hosted at Rabindra Sadan in Kolkata, West Bengal, alongside simultaneous parallel welfare programmes across Urban Local Bodies (ULBs) throughout the country.
High-Profile Assembly & National Scope
The central event in Kolkata will bring together key political and administrative stakeholders to review the scheme’s nationwide impact:
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Dignitaries in Attendance: Union Minister for Social Justice and Empowerment Dr. Virendra Kumar is expected to preside over the event, which is also likely to be attended by West Bengal Chief Minister Shri Suvendu Adhikari.
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Institutional Participation: Senior officials from the Centre and State, Members of Parliament, MLAs, district administrations, and representatives from the National Safai Karamcharis Finance & Development Corporation (NSKFDC) will actively participate.
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Divya Kala Mela Alignment: The main celebrations will share the stage with the ongoing Divya Kala Mela in Kolkata, highlighting the intersection of social inclusion and economic empowerment.
Ground-Level Interventions Across Urban Local Bodies (ULBs)
On July 14, ULBs nationwide will pivot their administrative machinery toward localized welfare initiatives specifically designed for frontline sanitation workers:
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Safety & Health: Executing specialized occupational safety training alongside comprehensive, on-site medical check-up camps.
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Mechanization Showcases: Hosting live demonstrations of state-of-the-art mechanized sanitation equipment and advanced personal protective safety gear.
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Entitlement Linkages: Facilitating direct access to pending government social security benefits, insurance entitlements, and welfare schemes.
The NAMASTE Scheme: Core Outcomes and Mandates
Launched during the 2023–24 fiscal year, the NAMASTE initiative aims to fundamentally dismantle hazardous manual cleaning practices in favor of a modernized, dignified ecosystem.
The Zero-Fatality Charter: The long-term objectives of the NAMASTE framework are anchored on a clear set of deliverables:
Zero Fatalities: Eliminating hazardous conditions to achieve zero mortality rates in sanitation-related work.
Complete Mechanization: Ensuring all sewer, septic tank, and urban cleaning operations are performed strictly using specialized safety devices, eliminating human contact with fecal matter.
Skilled Workforce: Certifying and upskilling all operational personnel under formal technical standards.
Institutional Strengthening: Capacitating Emergency Response Sanitation Units (ERSUs) to manage high-risk urban sanitation tasks efficiently.
Entrepreneurial Shift: Empowering workers—including sewer technicians, waste pickers, and former manual scavengers—by organizing them into Self-Help Groups (SHGs) and micro-enterprises.

