The Hindu 26.02.2013
Corporation to act tough against VLT evaders
Vacant Land Tax arrears touch Rs. 20 crore.
The collection of Vacant Land Tax (VLT) has become a
Herculean Task for the Vijayawada Municipal Corporation (VMC). As much
as Rs. 20 crore VLT arrears are pending as the addresses of vacant land
owners are not traceable.
The Corporation could
collect about Rs. 4.5 crore per annum during last two years though the
total VLT target would be around Rs. 8 crore per annum. There is a
slight improvement in the tax collection if Rs. 5.9 crore till date were
any indication. There are more than 12,000 VLT assessments in the VMC
limits.
The Corporation authorities, in 2009, have
put up at least 150 boards across the city, cautioning the owners of
vacant lands that their property would be seized if the tax is not paid
in time.
The move, expectedly, triggered a lot of hue and cry. But, there was a quantum jump in the tax collection.
Very
shortly such notice boards will be put up at vacant lands where the
owner’s address is not traceable, officials say. On other hand, the
vacant lands, the VMC officials say, were posing health hazards as the
owners were not maintaining them properly leading to mosquito breeding
etc. The haphazard growth of weed and stagnation of sullage and
rainwater in many vacant lands is common sight in the city.
Consequently, the Corporation is again toying with the idea of auctioning the vacant lands that are posing health problems.
The
VMC took ‘a calculated risk’ of auctioning the “unclaimed” vacant lands
in 2007 when Natarajan Gulzar was Municipal Commissioner, they recall.
“Under
the HMC (Hyderabad Municipal Corporation) Act, the Corporation has
right to sell the unclaimed vacant lands. The VMC would become the owner
of unclaimed vacant lands under the provisions of the HMC Act.
Secondly, the owners were not paying the vacant land tax. In addition,
the public health is involved in the issue, the officials say.