130. Responsibility for sanitation.—The following officers shall, for the purposes of sanitation,
have control over, and be responsible for maintaining in a sanitary condition, those parts of a cantonment,
respectively, which are specified in the case of each, that is to say:—
(a) the Officer Commanding the army in the cantonment—all buildings and lands which are
occupied or used for army purposes;
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(b) the Officer Commanding the navy in the cantonment—all buildings and lands which are
occupied or used for naval purposes;
(c) the Officer Commanding the air force in the cantonment—all buildings and lands which are
occupied or used for air force purposes;
(d) the Officer Commanding the station in the cantonment—all buildings and lands, occupied or
used for any defence purpose, other than those referred to in clauses (a), (b) and (c);
(e) the head of any civil department or railway administration occupying as such any part of the
cantonment—all buildings and lands in his charge as head of that department or administration;
(f) the head of any establishment or installation of the Defence Research and Development
Organisation in the cantonment—buildings and lands which are occupied or used for the purposes of
the Defence Research and Development Organisation in the cantonment;
(g) the head of a Public Sector Undertaking—the buildings and lands belonging to such
undertaking in the cantonment;
(h) the Chief Executive Officer—the buildings and lands in the civil area of the cantonment and
all other buildings and lands not covered in clauses (a) to (g) above.
131. General duties of Health Officer.—(1) The Health Officer shall be the Advisor to the Board in
all matters relating to sanitation and exercise a general sanitary supervision over the cantonment and shall
periodically submit a report along with his recommendations at least once in every month to the Board.
(2) The Assistant Health Officer shall perform such duties in connection with the sanitation of the
cantonment as are, subject to the control of the Board, allotted to him by the Health Officer.
Conservancy and sanitation
132. Public latrines, urinals and conservancy establishments.—All public latrines and urinals
provided or maintained by a Board shall be so constructed as to provide separate compartments for each
sex and the compartments so constructed shall be made accessible to and barrier free for the persons with
disabilities and shall be provided with all necessary conservancy establishments, and shall regularly be
cleansed and kept in proper order.
133. Duty of occupier to collect and deposit rubbish, etc.—(1) It shall be the duty of an occupier of
a building or land—
(a) to make adequate arrangements for the house scavenging of the building or land;
(b) to provide receptacles of the type and in the manner prescribed by the Chief Executive Officer
for the collection therein of all filth, rubbish and other offensive matter from such building or land
and to keep such receptacle in good condition and repair;
(c) to cause all filth, rubbish and other offensive matter collected in receptacles and to be
removed and deposited in the public receptacles, depots or places provided or appointed under
sub-section (1) of section 135.
(2) For the purpose of this section and section 134, “house scavenging” means the removal of filth,
rubbish or other offensive matter from a privy, latrine, urinal, drain, cesspool or other common receptacle
for such matter.
134. Power of Board to undertake private conservancy arrangement.—(1) On the application or
with the consent of the occupier of any building or land, or, where the occupier of any building or land
fails to make arrangements to the satisfaction of the Chief Executive Officer for the matters referred to in
this section, without such consent, and after giving notice in writing to the occupier, the Chief Executive
Officer may undertake the house scavenging of any building or land in the cantonment for such period as
he thinks fit on such terms as he may specify in this behalf.
(2) Where the Chief Executive Officer has undertaken the duties referred to in this section, all matter
removed in the performance of such duties shall be the property of the Board.
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135. Deposits and disposal of rubbish, etc.—(1) Every Board shall provide or appoint, in proper
and convenient situations, public receptacles, depots or places for the temporary deposit or disposal of
household rubbish, offensive matter, car cases of dead animals and sewage.
(2) The Chief Executive Officer may, by public notice, issue directions as to the time at which, the
manner in which, and the conditions subject to which, any matter referred to in sub-section (1) may be
removed along a street or may be deposited or otherwise disposed of.
(3) All matter deposited in receptacles, depots or places provided or appointed under this section shall
be the property of the Board.
136. Cesspools, receptacles, for filth, etc.—The Chief Executive Officer of any cantonment may, by
notice in writing—
(a) require any person having the control whether as owner, lessee or occupier of any land or
building in the cantonment—
(i) to close any cesspool appertaining to the land or building which, in the opinion of the Chief
Executive Officer, is a nuisance, or
(ii) to keep in a clean condition, in such manner as may be prescribed by notice, any receptacle
for filth or sewage accumulating on the land or in a building, or
(iii) to prevent the water of any private latrine, urinal, sink or bathroom or any other offensive
matter, from soaking, draining or flowing, or being put, from the land or building upon any street or
other public place, or into any water-course or into any drain not intended for the purpose, or
(iv) to collect and deposit for removal by the conservancy establishment of the Board, within
such time and in such receptacle or place, as may be specified in the notice, any offensive matter or
rubbish which such person has allowed to accumulate or remain under, in or on such building or
land; or
(b) require any person to desist from making or altering any drain leading into a public drain; or
(c) require any person having the control of a drain in the cantonment to cleanse, purify, repair or
alter the same, or otherwise put it in good order, within such time as may be specified in the notice.
137. Filling up of tank, etc.—(1) Where any well, tank, cistern, reservoir container, desert cooler or
any other, receptacle or place in the cantonment where water is stored or accumulated, whether within any
private enclosure or not, is in such a condition as to create a nuisance or, in the opinion of the Health
Officer, is or is likely to be a breeding place for mosquitoes, the Board may, by notice in writing, require
the owner, lessee or occupier thereof within such period as may be specified in the notice, to fill up or
cover the well, cistern, reservoir or receptacle, or to fill up the tank, or to drain off or remove the water, as
the case may be.
(2) The Board may from time to time take such measures as are necessary in its opinion for
prevention of breeding of mosquitoes, insects or any bacterial or viral carriers of disease in public places
under the control or management of the Board.
(3) The Board may, if it thinks fit, meet the whole or any portion of the expenses incurred in
execution of work mentioned in sub-sections (1) and (2) of this section.
138. Provision of latrines, etc.—The Chief Executive Officer may, by notice in writing, require the
owner or lessee of any building or land in the cantonment to provide, in such manner as may be specified
in the notice, any latrine, urinal, cesspool, dust-bin or other receptacle for filth, sewage, or rubbish, or any
additional latrine, urinal, cesspool or other receptacle as aforesaid, which should, in his opinion, be
provided for the building or land.
139. Sanitation in factories, etc.—Every person employing, whether on behalf of the Government or
otherwise, more than ten workmen or labourers, and every person managing or having control of a
market, school, theatre or other place of public resort, in a cantonment shall give notice of the fact to the
Chief Executive Officer, and shall provide such latrines and urinals, and shall employ such number of
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sweepers, as the Chief Executive Officer thinks fit, and shall cause the latrines and urinals to be kept
clean and in proper order:
Provided that nothing in this section shall apply in the case of a factory to which the Factories
Act, 1948 (63 of 1948) applies.
140. Private latrines.—Subject to the provisions of the Employment of Manual Scavenger and
Construction of Dry Latrine (Prohibition) Act, 1993 (46 of 1993), the Chief Executive Officer or any
official of the Board authorised by him may, by notice in writing,—
(a) require the owner or other person having the control of any private latrine, or, urinal in the
cantonment not to put the same to public use; or
(b) where any plan for the construction of private latrines or urinals has been approved, and
copies thereof may be obtained free of charge on application—
(i) require any person repairing or constructing any private latrine or urinal not to allow the
same to be used until it has been inspected by an official of the Board authorised by the Chief
Executive Officer, or under the direction of the Health Officer and approved by him as
conforming with such plan; or
(ii) require any person having control of any private latrine or urinal to re-build or alter the
same in accordance with such plan; or
(c) require the owner or other person having the control of any such private latrine or urinal
which, in the opinion of the Chief Executive Officer, constitutes a nuisance, to remove the latrine or
urinal; or
(d) require any person having the control whether as owner, lessee or occupier of any land or
building in the cantonment—
(i) to have any latrines provided for the same shut out by a sufficient roof and wall or fence
from the view of persons passing by or dwelling in the neighborhood, or
(ii) to cleanse in such manner as the Chief Executive Officer may specify in the notice any
latrine or urinal belonging to the land or building;
(e) require any person being the owner and having the control of any drain in the cantonment to
provide, within ten days from the service of the notice, such covering as may be specified in the
notice.
141. Special provisions for collection of rubbish and solid waste management.—(1) All solid
waste material generated in a cantonment shall be removed by the Board and be brought to the compost
sites or sanitary land sites or trenching sites earmarked by it for the purpose.
(2) The Board shall also devise schemes for collecting rubbish and garbage from each house in the
cantonment and may, if considers necessary, associate residents' welfare associations or such other
non governmental organisation for this purpose.
(3) As far as possible the Board shall devise appropriate system to ensure that all compostable or
bio-degradable waste in the cantonment is recycled and used for generating manure, bio-gas or any other
form of energy.
142. Removal of congested buildings.—(1) Where it appears to a Board that any block of buildings
in the cantonment is in an unhealthy condition by reason of the manner in which the buildings are
crowded together, or of the narrowness or closeness of the street, or of the want of proper drainage or
ventilation, or of the impracticability of cleansing the buildings or other similar cause, it may cause the
block to be inspected by a committee consisting of—
(a) the Health Officer,
(b) the Civil Surgeon of the district or, if his services are not available, some other medical officer
in the service of the Government,
(c) the Executive Engineer or a person deputed by the Executive Engineer in this behalf, and
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(d) two non-official members of the Board.
(2) The committee shall make a report in writing to the Board regarding the sanitary condition of the
block, and, if it considers that the condition thereof is likely to cause risk of disease to the inhabitants of
the building or of the neighbourhood or otherwise to endanger the public health, it shall clearly indicate
on a plan verified by the Executive Engineer or the person deputed by him to serve on the committee, the
buildings which should in its opinion wholly or in part be removed in order to abate the unhealthy
condition of the block.
(3) If, upon receipt of such report, the Board is of opinion that all or any buildings indicated should be
removed, it may, by notice in writing, require the owners thereof to remove them:
Provided that the Board shall make compensation as it thinks fit to the owners for any buildings so
removed which have been erected under proper authority:
Provided further that the Board may if it considers it equitable in the circumstances so to do pay to the
owners such sum as it thinks fit as compensation for any buildings so removed which have not been
erected under proper authority.
(4) For the purposes of this section “buildings” includes enclosure, walls and fences appertaining to
buildings.
143. Overcrowding of dwelling houses.—(1) Where it appears to a Board that any building or part
of a building in the cantonment which is used as a dwelling house is so overcrowded as to endanger the
health of the inmates thereof, it may, after such inquiry as it thinks fit, by notice in writing require the
owner or occupier of the building or part thereof, as the case may be, within such time not being less than
one month as may be specified in the notice, to abate the overcrowding of the same by reducing the
number of lodgers, tenants, or other inmates to such number as may be specified in the notice.
(2) Any person who fails, without reasonable cause, to comply with a requisition made upon him
under sub-section (1) shall be punishable with fine which may extend to two thousand five hundred
rupees, and, in the case of a continuing offence, to an additional fine which may extend to two hundred
fifty rupees for everyday after the first during which the failure has continued.
144. Power to require repair or alteration of building.—(1) Where any building in a cantonment is
so ill-constructed or dilapidated as to be, in the opinion of the Board, in an insanitary state, the Board
may, by notice in writing, require the owner, within such time as may be specified in the notice, to
execute such repairs or to make such alterations as it thinks necessary for the purpose of removing such
defects.
(2) A copy of every notice issued under sub-section (1) shall be conspicuously pasted on the building
to which it relates.
(3) A notice issued under sub-section (1) shall be deemed to have been complied with, if the owner of
the building to which it relates has, instead of executing the repairs or making the alterations directed by
the notice, removed the building.
145. Power to require land or building to be cleansed.—(1) If any building or land, whether
tenantable or otherwise, is—
(i) in an insanitary, filthy or unwholesome state; or
(ii) in the opinion of the Chief Executive Officer, a nuisance to persons residing in the
neighbourhood; or
(iii) overgrown with prickly-pear or rank and noisome vegetation the Chief Executive Officer
may, by notice in writing, require the owner, lessee or occupier of such building or land to clean,
lime-wash internally or externally, clear, or otherwise put such building or land in a proper state
within such period as may be specified in the notice.
(2) Any person who fails to comply with the notice issued under sub-section (1) shall be punishable
with fine which may extend to five thousand rupees, and, in the case of a continuing offence, with an
additional fine which may extend to two hundred fifty rupees for each day after the first during which the
offence continues.
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146. Prohibition in respect of air pollutant.—No owner, occupier, lessee or any other occupant of
the premises shall allow or cause to be allowed any air pollutant above the standards, laid down under
clause (g) of sub-section (1) of section 17 of the Air (Prevention and Control of Pollution)
Act, 1981 (14 of 1981).
147. Power to order disuse of house.—If a Board is satisfied that any building or part of a building
in the cantonment which is intended for or used as a dwelling place is unfit for human habitation, it may
cause a notice to be pasted on some conspicuous part of the building prohibiting the owner or occupier
thereof from using the building or room for human habitation, or allowing it to be so used, until it has
been rendered fit for such use to the satisfaction of the Board.
148. Removal of noxious vegetation.—The Chief Executive Officer may, by notice in writing,
require the owner, lessee, or occupier of any land in the cantonment to clear away and remove any thick
or noxious vegetation or undergrowth which appears to him to be injurious to health or offensive to
persons residing in the neighbourhood.
149. Agriculture and irrigation.—Where, in the opinion of a Board, the cultivation in the
cantonment of any description of crop or the use therein of any kind of manure or the irrigation of any
land therein in any specified manner is likely to be injurious to the health of persons dwelling in the
neighbourhood, the Board may, by public notice, prohibit such cultivation, use or irrigation after such
date as may be specified in the notice, or may, by a like notice, direct that it shall be carried out subject to
such conditions as the Board thinks fit:
Provided that if, when a notice is issued under this section, any land to which it relates has been
lawfully prepared for cultivation or any crop is sown therein or is standing there on, the Board shall, if it
directs that the notice is to take effect on a date earlier than that by which the crop would ordinarily be
sown or reaped, as the case may be, make compensation to all persons interested in the land or crop for
the loss, if any, incurred by them respectively by reason of compliance with the notice.
Burial and burning grounds
150. Power to call for information regarding burial and burning grounds.—The Chief Executive
Officer may, by notice in writing, require the owner or person in-charge of any burial or burning ground
in the cantonment to supply such information as may be specified in the notice concerning the condition,
management or position of such ground.
151. Permission for use of new burial or burning ground.—(1) No place in a cantonment which
has not been used as a burial or burning ground before the commencement of this Act shall be so used
without the permission in writing of the Board.
(2) Such permission may be granted subject to any conditions which the Board thinks fit to impose
for the purpose of preventing annoyance to, or danger to the health of, persons residing in the
neighbourhood.
152. Power to require closing of burial or burning ground.—(1) Where a Board, after making or
causing to be made local inquiry, is of opinion that any burial or burning ground in the cantonment has
become offensive to, or dangerous to the health of, persons living in the neighbourhood, it may, with the
previous sanction of the Central Government by notice in writing, require the owner or person in charge
of such ground to close the same from such date as may be specified in the notice.
(2) Where the Central Government sanctions the issue of any notice under sub-section (1) it shall
declare the conditions on which the burial or burning ground may be re-opened, and a copy of such
declaration shall be annexed to the notice.
(3) Where the Central Government sanctions the issues of any such notice, it shall require a new
burial or burning ground to be provided at the expense of the cantonment fund, or, if the community
concerned is willing to provide a new burial or burning ground, the Central Government shall require a
grant to be made from the cantonment fund towards the cost of the same.
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(4) No corpse shall be buried or burnt in any burial or burning ground in respect of which a notice
issued under this section is for the time being in force.
153. Exemption from operation of sections 150 to 152.—The provisions of sections 150, 151 and
152 shall not apply in the case of any burial ground which is for the time being managed by or on behalf
of the Government.
154. Removal of corpses.—The Board may, by public notice, prescribe routes in the cantonment by
which alone corpses may be removed to burial or burning grounds.
Prevention of infectious, contagious or communicable diseases
155. Obligation concerning infectious, contagious or communicable diseases.—(1) Any person
being in charge of, or in attendance, whether as a medical practitioner or otherwise, upon any person in a
cantonment whom he knows or has reason to believe to be suffering from a contagious, communicable or
infectious disease, or being the owner, lessee or occupier of any building in a cantonment in which he
knows that any person is so suffering, shall forthwith give information to the Board respecting the
existence of such disease.
(2) No person shall—
(a) knowing that he is suffering from a contagious, communicable or an infectious disease,
expose other persons to the risk of infection by his presence or conduct in any public street or public
place;
(b) having the care of a person whom he knows to be suffering from a contagious, communicable
or an infectious disease cause or permit that person to expose other persons to the risk of infection by
his presence or conduct in any such street or place as aforesaid;
(c) place or cause to be placed in a dustbin or other receptacle for the deposit of rubbish any
matter which he knows or has reason to believe to have been exposed to infection from a contagious,
communicable or an infectious disease and which has not been disinfected properly;
(d) throw or cause to be thrown into any latrine or urinal any matter which he knows or has
reason to believe to have been exposed to infection from a contagious, communicable or an infectious
disease and which has not been disinfected properly.
(3) Nothing contained in sub-section (1) or sub-section (2) shall apply in the case of venereal disease
where the person suffering there from is under specific and adequate medical treatment and is by reason
of his habits and conditions of life and residence unlikely to spread the disease.
(4) Whoever—
(a) fails to give information or gives false information to the Board respecting the existence of
such disease as is referred to in sub-section (1), or
(b) contravenes the provisions of sub-section (2), shall be punishable with fine which may extend
to one thousand rupees:
Provided that no person shall be punishable for failure to give information if he had reasonable cause
to believe that the information had already been duly given.
156. [Blood Bank.]—Omitted by the Jan Vishwas (Amendment of Provisions) Act, 2023 (18 of 2023),
s. 2 and Schedule (w.e.f. 2-11-2023).
157. Special measures incase of outbreak of infectious or epidemic diseases.—(1) In the event of
a cantonment being visited or threatened by an outbreak of any infectious or contagious disease among
the inhabitants thereof or of any epidemic disease among any animals therein, the Officer Commanding
the Station, if he thinks that the provisions of this Act or of any law for the time being in force in the
cantonment are insufficient for the purpose, may, with the previous sanction of the Central Government—
(a) take such special measures, and
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(b) by public notice, make such temporary regulations to be observed by the public or by any
class or section of the public, as he thinks necessary to prevent the outbreak or the spread of the
disease:
Provided that where in the opinion of the Officer Commanding the Station, immediate measures are
necessary, he may take action without such sanction as aforesaid and, if he does so, shall forthwith report
such action to the Central Government.
(2) Whoever commits a breach of any temporary regulation made under sub-section (1) shall be
deemed to have committed an offence under section 188 of the Indian Penal Code (45 of 1860).
158. Power to require names of dairyman's customers.—Where it is certified to the Chief
Executive Officer by a medical practitioner that the outbreak or spread of any infectious or contagious
disease in the cantonment is, in the opinion of such medical practitioner, attributable to the milk supplied
by any dairyman, the Chief Executive Officer may, by notice in writing, require the dairyman, with in
such time as may be specified in the notice, to furnish him with a full and complete list of the names and
addresses of all his customers within the cantonment, or to give him such information as will enable him
to trace the persons to whom the dairyman has sold milk.
159. Power to require names of a washerman's customers.—Where it is certified to the Chief
Executive Officer by the Health Officer that it is desirable, with a view to prevent the spread of any
infectious or contagious disease in the cantonment, that the Health Officer should be furnished with a list
of the customers of any washerman, the Chief Executive Officer may, by notice in writing, require the
washerman, within a time to be specified in the notice, to furnish the Health Officer with a full and
complete list of the names and addresses of all owners within the cantonment of clothes and other articles
which the washerman washes or has washed during the six weeks immediately preceding the date of the
notice.
Explanation.—For the purposes of this section, the expression “washerman” shall mean an individual,
body corporate, association of persons engaged in washing clothes in a cantonment.
160. Power to require names of patients or customers of a medical practitioner or paramedical
workers.—Where it is certified to the Chief Executive Officer by the Health Officer or a doctor in the
employment of the Board that there is apprehension of the outbreak or spreading of any infectious or
contagious or communicable disease in the cantonment because of use of contaminated needles, syringes
or any other such equipment by a medical practitioner or by any paramedical worker, the Chief Executive
Officer may, by notice in writing, require the medical practitioner or the paramedical worker, within such
time as may be specified in the notice, to furnish him with a full and complete list of the names and
addresses of all his customers or patients within the cantonment, or to give him such information as will
enable him to trace the persons whom the medical practitioner or the paramedical worker has attended to
or treated in the six weeks preceding the date of issuing the notice.
161. Report after inspection of dairy or washerman or medical practitioner's place of
business.—Where, after inspection the Health Officer is of opinion that any infectious, contagious or
communicable disease is caused or is likely to arise in the cantonment from the consumption of the milk
supplied from a dairy or from the washing of clothes or other articles in any place, or from any process
employed by a washerman, or from use of contaminated needles, syringes or other such equipment by a
medical practitioner or any paramedical staff, he shall report the matter to the Chief Executive Officer.
162. Action on report submitted by Health Officer.—Upon receipt of a report submitted by the
Health Officer under section 161, the Chief Executive Officer may, by notice in writing,—
(a) prohibit the supply of milk from the dairy until the notice has been withdrawn; or
(b) prohibit the washerman from washing clothes or other articles in any such place or by any
such process as aforesaid until the notice has been withdrawn or unless he uses such place in such
manner, or washes by process, as the Chief Executive Officer may direct in the notice; or
(c) prohibit the medical practitioner or the paramedical worker from using any such needles,
syringes or other such equipment unless the notice is withdrawn or rectification as may be required in
the notice is carried out.
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163. Examination of milk, washed clothes or needles, syringes, etc.—The Health Officer or a
doctor in the employment of the Board may take possession of any milk, clothes or other articles which
are or have recently been in the possession of any dairyman on whom a notice has been served under
section 158, or of any clothes or other articles which are or have recently been in the possession of any
washerman, on whom a notice has been served under section 159, or any needles, syringes or such other
equipment which are or have recently been in the possession of the medical practitioner or paramedical
worker to whom a notice under section 160 has been issued and may subject the same or cause the same
to be subjected to such chemical or other process as he may think necessary; and the Board shall pay from
the cantonment fund all the costs of the process and shall also pay to the owner of the milk, clothes or
other articles such sum as compensation for any loss occasioned by such process as may appear to it to be
reasonable.
164. Contamination of public conveyance.—Whoever in a cantonment—
(a) uses a public conveyance while suffering from an infectious or contagious disease, or
(b) uses a public conveyance for the carriage of a person who is suffering from any such disease,
or
(c) uses a public conveyance for the carriage of the corpse of a person who has died from any
such disease,
shall be bound to take proper precautions against the communication of the disease to other persons using
or who may there after use the conveyance and to notify such use to the owner, driver or person in charge
of the conveyance, and further to report without delay to the Chief Executive Officer the number of the
conveyance and the name of the person so notified.
165. Disinfection of public conveyance.—(1) Where any person suffering from, or the corpse of any
person who has died from, an infectious, communicable or contagious disease has been carried in a public
conveyance which ordinarily plies in a cantonment, the driver thereof shall forthwith report the fact to the
Chief Executive Officer who shall forth with cause the conveyance to be disinfected if that has not
already been done.
(2) No such conveyance shall be brought again into use until the Chief Executive Officer has granted
a certificate stating that it can be used without causing risk of infection.
166. Penalty for failure to report.—Whoever fails to make to the Chief Executive Officer any report
which he is required to make by section 164 or section 165 shall be punishable with fine which may
extend to one thousand rupees.
167. Driver of conveyance not bound to carry person suffering from infectious or contagious
disease.—Notwithstanding anything contained in any law for the time being in force, no owner, driver or
person in charge of a public conveyance shall be bound to convey or to allow to be conveyed in such
conveyance in or in the vicinity of a cantonment any person suffering from an infectious or contagious
disease or the corpse of any person who has died from such disease unless and until such person pays or
tenders a sum fixed by the Chief Executive Officer from time to time, to cover any loss and expense
which would ordinarily be incurred in disinfecting the conveyance.
168. Disinfection of building or articles therein.—Where a Board is, upon the advice of the Health
Officer, of opinion that the cleansing and disinfection of any building or part of a building in the
cantonment or of any articles in any such building or part which are likely to retain infection, or the
renewal of the flooring of any such building or part of such building, would tend to prevent or check the
spread of any infectious or contagious disease, the Board may by notice in writing, require the owner or
occupier to cleanse and disinfect, the said building, part or articles, as the case may be, or to renew the
said flooring, within such time as may be specified in the notice:
Provided that where, in the opinion of the Board the owner or occupier is from poverty or any other
cause unable effectually to carry out any such requisition, the Board may, at the expense of the
cantonment fund, cleanse and disinfect the building, part or articles, or as the case may be, renew the
flooring.
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169. Destruction of infectious hut or shed.—(1) Where the destruction of any hut or shed in a
cantonment is, in the opinion of the Board, necessary to prevent the spread of any infectious or contagious
disease, the Board may, by notice in writing, require the owner to destroy the hut or shed and the
materials thereof within such time as may be specified in the notice.
(2) Where the President of a Board is satisfied that the destruction of any hut or shed in the
cantonment is immediately necessary for the purpose of preventing the spread of any infectious or
contagious disease, he may order the owner or occupier of the hut or shed to destroy the same forthwith,
or may himself cause it to be destroyed after giving not less than two hours' notice to the owner or
occupier thereof.
(3) The Board shall pay compensation to the owner of any hut or shed destroyed under this section.
170. Temporary shelter for inmates of disinfected or destroyed building or shed.—The Board
shall provide free of charge temporary shelter or house accommodation for the members of any family in
which an infectious or contagious disease has appeared who have been compelled to leave their dwelling
by reason of any proceedings taken under section 168 or section 169, and who desire such shelter or
accommodation as aforesaid to be provided for them.
171. Disinfection of building before letting the same.—(1) Where in a cantonment any building or
part of a building is intended to be let, in which any person has, within six weeks immediately preceding,
been suffering from an infectious or contagious disease, the person letting the building or part shall before
doing so disinfect the same in such manner as the Chief Executive Officer may, by public or special
notice, direct, together with all articles therein liable to retain infection.
(2) For the purposes of this section, the keeper of a hotel, lodging house or sarai shall be deemed to
let to any person who is admitted as a guest therein that part of the building in which such person is
permitted to reside.
172. Disposal of infected article without disinfection.—No person shall, without previous
disinfection of the same, give, lend, sell, transmit or otherwise dispose of to another person any article or
thing which he knows or has reason to believe has been exposed to contamination by any infectious or
contagious disease and is likely to be used in, or taken into, a cantonment.
173. Means of disinfection.—(1) Every Board shall—
(a) provide proper places with necessary attendants and apparatus for the disinfection of
conveyances, clothing, bedding or other articles which have been exposed to infection;
(b) cause conveyances, clothing or other articles brought for disinfection to be disinfected either
free of charge or on payment of such charges as the Chief Executive Officer may fix.
(2) The Chief Executive Officer may notify places at which articles of clothing, bedding,
conveyances or other articles which have been exposed to infection shall be washed, and, if it does so, no
person shall wash any such thing at any place not so notified without having previously disinfected such
thing.
(3) The Chief Executive Officer may direct the destruction of any clothing, bedding or other article in
the cantonment likely to retain infection, and may give such compensation as he thinks fit for any article
so destroyed.
174. Making or selling of food, etc., or washing clothes by infected person.—Whoever, while
suffering from, or in circumstances in which he is likely to spread, any infectious or contagious disease,—
(a) makes, carries or offers for sale in a cantonment or takes any part in the business of making,
carrying or offering for sale therein any article of food or drink or any medicine or drug for human
consumption, or any article of clothing or bedding for personal use or wear, or
(b) takes any part in the business of the washing or carrying of clothes,
shall be punishable with fine which may extend to five thousand rupees.
175. Power to restrict or prohibit sale of food or drink.—When a cantonment is visited or
threatened by an outbreak of any infectious or contagious disease, the Chief Executive Officer on behalf
of the Board may, by public notice, restrict in such manner or prohibit for such period, as may be
specified in the notice, the sale or preparation of any article of food or drink for human consumption
specified in the notice or the sale of any flesh of any description of animals so specified.
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176. Control over wells, tanks, etc.—(1) If the Chief Executive Officer on the advice given by the
Health Officer is of opinion that the water in any well, tank or other place is likely, if used for drinking, to
endanger, or cause the spread of, any disease, it may,—
(a) by public notice, prohibit the removal or use of such water for drinking;
(b) by notice in writing, require the owner or person having control of such well, tank or place to
take such steps as may be directed by the notice to prevent the public from having access to or using
such water; or
(c) take such other steps as it may consider expedient to prevent the outbreak or spread of any
such disease.
(2) In the event of a cantonment or any part of a cantonment being visited or threatened by an
outbreak of any infectious or contagious disease, the Health Officer or any person authorised by him in
this behalf may, without notice and at any time, inspect and disinfect any well, tank or other place from
which water is, or is likely to be, taken for the purposes of drinking, and may further take such steps as he
thinks fit to ensure the purity of the water or to prevent the use of the same for drinking purposes.
177. Disposal of infectious corpse.—Where any person has died in a cantonment from any infectious
or contagious disease, the Chief Executive Officer, may, by notice in writing,—
(a) require any person having charge of the corpse to convey the same to a mortuary, thereafter to
be disposed of in accordance with law; or
(b) prohibit the removal of the corpse from the place where death occurred except for the purpose
of being buried or burned or of being conveyed to a mortuary.
Hospitals and dispensaries
178. Maintenance or aiding of hospitals or dispensaries.—(1) A Board may—
(a) provide and maintain either within or without the cantonment as many hospitals and
dispensaries as it thinks fit; or
(b) make, upon such terms as it thinks fit to impose, a grant-in-aid to any hospital or dispensary or
veterinary hospital, whether within or without the cantonment, not maintained by it.
(2) Every hospital or dispensary maintained or aided under sub-section (1) shall have attached to it a
ward or wards for the treatment of persons suffering from infectious or contagious diseases.
(3) The Medical Officer appointed by the Board shall be in charge of every Hospital and dispensary
maintained or aided under this section and be responsible to the Health Officer for medical activities and
to the Chief Executive Officer for over all administrative activities of the hospital.
179. Medical supplies, appliances, etc.—(1) Every hospital or dispensary maintained or aided under
section 178 shall be maintained in accordance with any general or special orders of the Central
Government for the conduct of hospitals and dispensaries or in accordance with the said orders modified
in such manner as the Central Government may think fit.
(2) The Board shall cause every such hospital or dispensary to be provided with all requisite drugs,
instruments, apparatus, furniture and appliances and with sufficient cots, bedding and clothing for
in-patients.
180. Free patients.—At every hospital or dispensary maintained or aided under section 178, the sick
poor of the cantonment, and other inhabitants of the cantonment suffering from infectious, communicable
or contagious disease, and, with the sanction of the Board, any other sick persons, may receive medical or
surgical treatment free of cost, and, if treated as in-patients, shall be either dieted gratuitously or, if the
medical officer in charge so directs, shall be granted subsistence allowance on such scale as the Board
may fix.
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181. Paying patients.—Any sick person who is ineligible to receive medical or surgical treatment
free of cost in any hospital or dispensary under section 180 may be admitted for treatment therein upon
such terms as the Board thinks fit.
182. Power to order person to attend hospital or dispensary.—(1) If the Health Officer or the
Medical Officer in charge of a hospital or dispensary maintained or aided under section 178 has reason to
believe that any person living in the cantonment is suffering from an infectious, communicable or
contagious disease, he may, by notice in writing, call upon such person to attend for examination at any
such hospital or dispensary at such time as may be specified in the notice and not to quit it without the
permission of the Medical Officer in charge; and, on the arrival of such person at the hospital or
dispensary, the Medical Officer in charge thereof may examine him for the purpose of satisfying himself
whether or not such person is suffering from an infectious, communicable or contagious disease:
Provided that, if, having regard to the nature of the disease or the condition of the person suffering
there from, or the general environment and circumstances of such person, the Health Officer or Medical
Officer, as the case may be, considers that the attendance of such person at a hospital or dispensary is
likely to prove unnecessary or inexpedient, he shall examine such person at such person's own residence.
(2) If any person on examination under sub-section (1), is found to be suffering from an infectious or
contagious disease, the Health Officer or Medical Officer, as the case may be, may cause him to be
detained in hospital until he is free from the infection or contagion:
Provided that, if having regard to the nature of the disease or the condition of the person suffering
there from, or the general environment and circumstances of such person, he considers that the detention
of such person at a hospital or dispensary is unnecessary or inexpedient, he shall discharge such person
and take such measures or give such directions in the matter as he thinks necessary.
183. Power to exclude from cantonment persons refusing to attend hospital or dispensary.—(1)
If the Health Officer or the Medical Officer in charge of a hospital or dispensary maintained or aided
under section 178 reports in writing to the Officer Commanding the station that any person having
received a notice under section 182 has refused or omitted to attend at the hospital or dispensary,
specified in the notice, or that such person, having attended the hospital or dispensary, has quitted it
without the permission of such Medical Officer, or that any person has failed to comply with any
direction given to him under section 182, the Officer Commanding the station may, by order in writing,
direct such person to be removed from the cantonment within twenty-four hours and not to re-enter it
without his permission in writing.
(2) No person who has under sub-section (1) been ordered to be removed from and not to re-enter a
cantonment shall enter any other cantonment without the written permission of the Officer Commanding
the station.
Control of traffic for hygienic purposes
184. Routes for pilgrims and others.—(1) A Board may provide or prescribe suitable routes for the
use of persons assing through the cantonment—
(a) on their way to or from fairs or places of pilgrimage or other places of public resort; or
(b) during times when an infectious or contagious disease is prevalent, and may, by public notice,
require such persons as aforesaid to use such routes and no others.
(2) All routes provided or prescribed under sub-section (1) shall be clearly and sufficiently indicated
by the Board.
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Special conditions regarding essential services
185. Conditions of service of safai karamcharis and others.—1
[ (1) No person employed in any
essential service under a Board in a cantonment shall, in the absence of any contract, resign without
reasonable cause or absent himself from duty without proper authority and in case of such resignation or
absence from duty, disciplinary proceedings shall be initiated against him in accordance with such
procedure as may be prescribed.]
(2) The Central Government may, by notification in the Official Gazette, direct that on and from such
date as may be specified in the notification, the provisions of this section shall apply in the case of any
specified class of employees employed by a Board whose functions intimately concern the public health
or safety.