Solid waste collection service satisfaction in non-service area of Jigawa State, Nigeria

The absence of a sound solid waste collection services poses a major challenge for the residents and local authority in Jigawa State. Providing solid waste collection services remain a distant hope, mainly because local authority could not provide the services to the region. Solid waste collection i...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Aminu, Mansur, Abd Manaf, Latifah, Sharaai, Amir Hamzah, Zainordin, Nazatul Syadia
Format: Article
Published: Asers Publishing 2022
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/103251/
https://journals.aserspublishing.eu/jemt/article/view/7209
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id my.upm.eprints.103251
record_format eprints
spelling my.upm.eprints.1032512023-11-16T04:56:22Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/103251/ Solid waste collection service satisfaction in non-service area of Jigawa State, Nigeria Aminu, Mansur Abd Manaf, Latifah Sharaai, Amir Hamzah Zainordin, Nazatul Syadia The absence of a sound solid waste collection services poses a major challenge for the residents and local authority in Jigawa State. Providing solid waste collection services remain a distant hope, mainly because local authority could not provide the services to the region. Solid waste collection is concentrated only in the capital Dutse, where other local authority areas are without collection services, therefore, the risk of the region to uncontrolled waste disposal is high. The objective of the study is to examine the satisfaction with solid waste collection service in non-service areas of Jigawa State, Nigeria. Quantitative technique was used in data collection, and the questionnaire was designed based on a 5-Likert scale to study solid waste collection service satisfaction among the resident’s. The instrument was validated by 8 panel of experts selectively drawn from academia and local authority with the reliability of the instrument standing at 0.846, which is worthy enough for the instrument to be accepted.and simple random sampling method were used to select respondents. With population of 37,281 households, the recommended sample is 394 at a 95% confidence level. In addition, 10% of the calculated sample was added to round it up to 433 households selected for the study, where the multistage sampling technique was used to administer the questionnaires to the respondents. The data was analyze using SPSS (IBM 25 version), descriptive statistics with frequency and percentage, then illustrated and interpreted. The findings revealed that 283 (74%) of the respondents were satisfied with the level of household participation in solid waste collection, 248 (65%) of the respondents reported being satisfied with the cleanliness of the non-service area done by the non-residents. 231 (60%) were satisfied with collection frequency. On the other hand, 219 (57%) were not satisfied with the absence of waste collection service, a weak percentage 10 (3%) of the respondents were very not satisfied with the collection services by the non-residents. The study suggest that although solid waste collection services provided by the non-residents are somewhat acceptable, there is much room for improvement on the part of the local authority to enhance the system. Planning and policy implementation as well as institutional and legal framework is required for optimum integration of non-residents in to formal waste collection, this is very crucial to ensure efficient service delivery and satisfaction to non-service areas. Asers Publishing 2022 Article PeerReviewed Aminu, Mansur and Abd Manaf, Latifah and Sharaai, Amir Hamzah and Zainordin, Nazatul Syadia (2022) Solid waste collection service satisfaction in non-service area of Jigawa State, Nigeria. Journal of Environmental Management and Tourism, 13 (5). art. no. 61. 1407 - 1415. ISSN 2068-7729 https://journals.aserspublishing.eu/jemt/article/view/7209 10.14505/jemt.v13.5(61).16
institution Universiti Putra Malaysia
building UPM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Putra Malaysia
content_source UPM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://psasir.upm.edu.my/
description The absence of a sound solid waste collection services poses a major challenge for the residents and local authority in Jigawa State. Providing solid waste collection services remain a distant hope, mainly because local authority could not provide the services to the region. Solid waste collection is concentrated only in the capital Dutse, where other local authority areas are without collection services, therefore, the risk of the region to uncontrolled waste disposal is high. The objective of the study is to examine the satisfaction with solid waste collection service in non-service areas of Jigawa State, Nigeria. Quantitative technique was used in data collection, and the questionnaire was designed based on a 5-Likert scale to study solid waste collection service satisfaction among the resident’s. The instrument was validated by 8 panel of experts selectively drawn from academia and local authority with the reliability of the instrument standing at 0.846, which is worthy enough for the instrument to be accepted.and simple random sampling method were used to select respondents. With population of 37,281 households, the recommended sample is 394 at a 95% confidence level. In addition, 10% of the calculated sample was added to round it up to 433 households selected for the study, where the multistage sampling technique was used to administer the questionnaires to the respondents. The data was analyze using SPSS (IBM 25 version), descriptive statistics with frequency and percentage, then illustrated and interpreted. The findings revealed that 283 (74%) of the respondents were satisfied with the level of household participation in solid waste collection, 248 (65%) of the respondents reported being satisfied with the cleanliness of the non-service area done by the non-residents. 231 (60%) were satisfied with collection frequency. On the other hand, 219 (57%) were not satisfied with the absence of waste collection service, a weak percentage 10 (3%) of the respondents were very not satisfied with the collection services by the non-residents. The study suggest that although solid waste collection services provided by the non-residents are somewhat acceptable, there is much room for improvement on the part of the local authority to enhance the system. Planning and policy implementation as well as institutional and legal framework is required for optimum integration of non-residents in to formal waste collection, this is very crucial to ensure efficient service delivery and satisfaction to non-service areas.
format Article
author Aminu, Mansur
Abd Manaf, Latifah
Sharaai, Amir Hamzah
Zainordin, Nazatul Syadia
spellingShingle Aminu, Mansur
Abd Manaf, Latifah
Sharaai, Amir Hamzah
Zainordin, Nazatul Syadia
Solid waste collection service satisfaction in non-service area of Jigawa State, Nigeria
author_facet Aminu, Mansur
Abd Manaf, Latifah
Sharaai, Amir Hamzah
Zainordin, Nazatul Syadia
author_sort Aminu, Mansur
title Solid waste collection service satisfaction in non-service area of Jigawa State, Nigeria
title_short Solid waste collection service satisfaction in non-service area of Jigawa State, Nigeria
title_full Solid waste collection service satisfaction in non-service area of Jigawa State, Nigeria
title_fullStr Solid waste collection service satisfaction in non-service area of Jigawa State, Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed Solid waste collection service satisfaction in non-service area of Jigawa State, Nigeria
title_sort solid waste collection service satisfaction in non-service area of jigawa state, nigeria
publisher Asers Publishing
publishDate 2022
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/103251/
https://journals.aserspublishing.eu/jemt/article/view/7209
_version_ 1783879944414167040
score 13.211869