Though there is no exact figure of people engaged in one or other form of manual scavenging in the state, their total number is believed to be in thousands, according to NGOs working in the area.
Of them, a majority are "invisible" ones, as they are not ready to reveal their job due to the societal stigma attached to it, they said.
Suchitwa Mission, the state nodal agency for sanitation, entrusted with the task of study and survey, said the format of the study is all ready and the mechanisation process will be carried out after that.
The state government has set aside Rs 10 crore for total automation of manual scavenging and the rehabilitation of the employees, its officials said.
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"The government is of the view that such practises should not be continued in the state in any form. We plan to launch the survey in one week," Suchitwa Mission Director (Operations), C V Joy told PTI.
"But they are not ready to reveal whether their present generation is continuing this job or not. Even those engaged in the profession are also reluctant to reveal it in public," he said.
However, Joy expressed confidence that the comprehensive survey would trace in-depth details in this regard.
Besides the survey, a detailed study of the health conditions of manual scavengers would also be carried out simultaneously.
The survey would be carried out by the resource persons of Suchitwa Mission.
The health study will be conducted with the support of state Department of Communicable Diseases.
"Those engaged in manual scavenging are prone to various diseases especially dermal diseases," he said.
On the mechanisation part, he said the most advanced equipment available would be bought for sewage and drainage cleaning and garbage collection and transportation.
"We are planning to spend the major portion of the budget for their rehabilitation. We don't think the machines will cost much," he said.
Sundar Raj, a member of Safai Karmachari Andolan, an outfit working for eradication of manual scavenging, said people are engaged in manual scavenging by their own and as contract labours in the state.
As per the Supreme Court verdict in this regard, cleaning of toilets, drainage and septic tanks and clearing of human human excreta from railway tracks or any other open space would come under 'manual scavenging'.
"It is true that more than 10,000 people, including youngsters, are engaged in the job in the state. But no exact figures are available in this regard. Majority of them are not ready to reveal about their job," he said.
The workers are highly prone to various diseases, ranging from cancer and TB to skin diseases due to frequent contact with drainage waste and human excreta, the activist added.
Journalist-turned filmmaker Vidhu Vincent said a large number of people were brought to Kerala from neighbouring Tamil Nadu to clean dry toilets during the 1920s.
"In the state, manual scavengers are directly entering septic tanks and drainage pits without any safety measures. They handle filthy waste and human excreta without masks or gloves," she told PTI.
The Prohibition of Employment as Manual Scavengers and their Rehabilitation Act, 2013 defines the 'manual scavenger' as a person engaged or employed by an individual or a local authority or an agency or a contractor,for manually cleaning, carrying, disposing of, or handling in any manner, human excreta in an insanitary latrine or in an open drain or pit, or on a railway track or in such other spaces.