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E-Governance

Municipal council to have website, toll free number

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The Pioneer                28.06.2013

Municipal council to have website, toll free number

Hazaribagh municipal council will soon have its own website and will launch a toll free number for the residents of municipal area. It was decided in the board meeting of Hazaribagh municipal council held under the chairmanship of Anjali Kumari.

The denizens can register their problems through this toll free number and they can get the up-to-date information about the council and its activities through the website. Both these facilities will start within a month.

In this meeting with the consent of ward councillors the municipal council has decided to hand over some important roads of the town area to the PWD road division for construction and maintenance. Initially 8 roads will be given to the road division and after scrutinising the proposals of ward councilors some more roads may be handed over.

As the meeting started the ward councilors raised the question of their seating arrangement in the municipal office. Executive officer Ajay Kumar Sao said that within a month he will arrange it. In this meeting the councilors raised the problems of drain cleaning and mosquito terror. Executive officer informed that special cleaning drive is going on these days and fogging in atleast one ward is being done daily to control these problems.

In this meeting the councilors also discussed on the issue of increasing the income of municipal council. It was decided that satellite mapping of the area will be done with the help of some agency and then fresh drive will start to review the taxes. In this meeting it was also decided unanimously that there will be a 25% hike in the taxes imposed by the government on hotels, lodges, rest houses, community halls, marriage halls etc.

In this meeting Vice-Chairman Anand Dev, ward councillors Kamal Gope, Kajal Mukherjee, Sudipto Chaterjee, Neelima Anant, Vishwanath Vishwakarma, Aruna Devi, Mona Devi and others were present. The board also confirmed the change of name of a part of Kumhartoli Road as Sant Praman Sagar Marg.

 

After trifurcation, civic bodies will now get separate web portals

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The Hindu               27.06.2013

After trifurcation, civic bodies will now get separate web portals

Staff Reporter

A year after the trifurcation the erstwhile Municipal Corporation of Delhi into three civic bodies, the authorities have decided to trifurcate the corporation portal as well. Instead of one, there will be three e-governance portals for the three civic bodies - South, North and East Delhi Municipal Corporations.

The SDMC which is in charge of the common information and technology (IT) department of all three civic bodies gave its go ahead for the trifurcation. The trifurcation is expected to be completed in another four years.

As part of the process, at least 16 citizen-centric software applications will be trifurcated. The applications include veterinary trade licensing, general trade licensing, health trade licensing, factory licence, hackney carriage licence, parks and community halls bookings, birth and death certificates, property tax, hawking permits and RTI, among others.

At present the important links, like property tax, birth and death certificates and other applications, are functioning but are not present on a single platform because of which people find it difficult to locate them. The trifurcation process is expected to bring them together on one website.

Corporation officials blamed trifurcation for the delay in website operations. They argued that since the present software applications delivered by Tech Mahindra were meant for the unified MCD, every thing will have to be done from start again.

The website of the erstwhile Municipal Corporation of Delhi was a huge hit and was very user-friendly. The online property tax system of the corporation was popular because it enabled them to file the returns and make the payments from the comfort of their homes.

 

Civic body grappling with online payment

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The Times of India             26.06.2013

Civic body grappling with online payment

CHANDIGARH: Registration of birth and death will go online in two months but with the Municipal Corporation yet to work out a system of online payment, the goal of providing a convenient way of getting birth and death certificates issued is likely to be defeated.

'The database for online registration will soon be uploaded on the MC server, from where residents can access the certificates. We are preparing the database at the moment and it will become functional by August,' says Mahesh Gandhi, a computer programmer working on the project. He, however, added, 'The idea of online payment was finalized a month back but the procedure of paying online is still a grey area and nothing has been finalised till now.'
Cities like Cuttack, Bangalore and Coimbatore have introduced online system of submitting and making payments for certificates in early 2010.

According to the present system, family members of the deceased or the newborn have to approach the zonal office of the MC and fill an application with name, date and other personal details. These forms have to be submitted at the respective ward offices along with a fee of Rs 5 to procure a copy of the certificate. Once the online facility is introduced, residents will be able to download the birth and death certificates from the MC web portal after the completion of the initial registration procedure.

In online registration, the civic body will upload web links which could be accessed and searched based on name, address or date of birth or death maintained in the register. The copy of the birth and death certificate could be accessed and downloaded from the website. People can submit documents and make payment for the certificates online. In online payment gateway, one need not wait for the city health officer's signature. His digitized signature can be put immediately after creation of the certificate.

'If at all we manage to apply online, we will have to visit the city health office to submit documents which does not make sense in online service.' says Vikas Roy, a resident of Chandigarh. The purpose of online registration is again not solved here because the documents are to be submitted in the office after one gets the print-out of the certificate. 'The city health office can accept the scanned copy of the certificate so that one does not have to visit the office for the document submission; this can be a better idea for a completely managed online registration process,' says Manisha Garg, a resident of Sector 48. 

 


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