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Financial Management

East Delhi civic body financially unviable, says commissioner

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The Hindu        21.11.2014  

East Delhi civic body financially unviable, says commissioner

Demands Rs.600 crore subsidy from Delhi Govt.

Increasing deficits and falling revenues were the highlights of East Delhi Municipal Corporation Commissioner Manish Gupta’s budget presentation on Thursday.

Mr. Gupta began his presentation of the revised budget estimates for 2014-2015 and budget estimates for 2015-2016 by emphasising the precarious financial condition of the EDMC. The civic body has been struggling to pay salaries of employees for months.

The civic body’s deficit for 2014-2015 was revised from Rs.468.34 crore to Rs.612.33 crore, which is expected to increase to Rs.682.07 crore. The Commissioner said the EDMC was not sustainable and would need huge grants from the government to survive.

“There is an inherent and systemic problem in the EDMC’s finances. The revenue generation cannot match the expenditure,” said Mr. Gupta, who is also the commissioner of the South Delhi Municipal Corporation.

He said the revenue potential of the EDMC was less than its North and South Delhi counterparts. East Delhi does not have top category colonies, where property tax rates are higher. South Delhi, in comparison, has many such colonies and has more ‘lucrative’ spots in terms of advertising and parking revenue.

Mr. Gupta demanded that the Delhi Government fulfil the budgetary shortfall and write off past loans as grants. “We are demanding a Rs.600 crore subsidy per year from the Delhi Government,” he said.

Meanwhile, the budget proposals included increasing revenue by hiking the base unit area value for property tax assessment by 45 per cent and introducing new cesses like professional and betterment taxes. But, even if these are implemented, the hikes will not dent the deficit, said the Commissioner.

There is an inherent and systemic problem in the EDMC’s finances. The revenue generation cannot match the expenditure”

“There is an inherent and systemic problem in the EDMC’s finances. The revenue generation cannot match the expenditure”

 

EDMC prepares budget amid fund crunch

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The Hindu       13.11.2014 

EDMC prepares budget amid fund crunch

Amid a financial crunch, the East Delhi Municipal Corporation (EDMC) is preparing its budget for the next financial year while an analysis shows that only 38 per cent of this fiscal’s proposals have been fruitful.

The Hindu analysed 21 major proposals made by then Leader of the House B.B. Tyagi on February 2 this year. Out of the budget promises, eight proposals have not seen any progress, seven have been cleared, and six are under process.

Mr. Tyagi, who is the Standing Committee chairperson now, said on Tuesday that the corporation was indeed in a dire financial state.

“We have been forced to take loans to pay salaries of our employees and the Delhi government has not given us any help. We don’t have the funds to undertake all the development projects,” said the BJP leader.

Among the projects that have not worked out are community-run kitchens on the lines of the Amma canteens in Tamil Nadu, a nursing school in Khichripur, and a media centre at the EDMC headquarters in Patparganj.

The civic body had proposed an increase in the amount paid to widows for their daughters’ wedding from Rs. 25,000 to Rs. 30,000, but this could not be done for lack of funds.

Mr. Tyagi admitted that many of the proposals he presented in February would not be completed by March 31, 2015. He added that the civic body had the lowest income among the three municipal corporations.

The corporation is, however, working on building women’s toilets at busy markets at a cost of Rs. 1 crore, developing a CNG-powered furnace at the Karkardooma crematorium, and registering all banquet halls and farmhouses to increase revenue. A total of 20 sports academies are being developed across East Delhi and work on installing solar panels at municipal primary schools is also on.

As envisaged in the budget, the EDMC has started home delivery of birth and death certificates through Speed Post at a cost of Rs. 60 lakh.

A special window in both zones of the EDMC has also been started to add names on birth certificates within half an hour.

 

Rs. 2.94-cr. surplus budget

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The Hindu       05.02.2014

Rs. 2.94-cr. surplus budget

In the absence of a council body of Hubli Dharwad Municipal Corporation (HDMC), the State government has approved a Rs. 2.94-crore surplus budget for the financial year 2014-15.

Releasing the budget estimates on Tuesday, Deputy Commissioner of Dharwad Sameer Shukla, who is also the Administrator of the municipal corporation, said there would be an increase of 10 per cent in the corporation’s revenue from last year.

A total revenue of Rs. 344.31 crore is expected from all sources, including property tax, rents and grants, in 2014-15 and the expenditure is estimated at Rs. 341.36 crore.

Of the total expenditure of Rs. 341.36 crore, the corporation will spend Rs. 116.78 crore for employees’ salaries, allowances and pension, Rs. 33 crores towards electricity charges, among others.

 


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