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Financial Management

VMC looks forward to Rs. 860-crore grant

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The Hindu            17.09.2010

VMC looks forward to Rs. 860-crore grant

Staff Reporter


The Corporation has prepared an annual development plan

The works are planned to be taken up over a span of five years


VIJAYAWADA: The Vijayawada Municipal Corporation (VMC) has sent proposals worth Rs. 860.80 crore to the State government for taking up developmental works and urban services. The Government would release the amount from the Thirteenth Finance Commission's grants, according to Municipal Commissioner G. Ravi Babu.

The Commissioner made a presentation to stakeholders, including corporators, MLAs, MLCs and the MP, on the proposals sent for the release of grants, here on Thursday. He said that the VMC general body would have to approve the proposals for sanction of the grants.

The Corporation was planning to take up works such as developing municipal school buildings, town wide drain projects, integrated solid waste management in private public partnership, protection of canals and ponds, and development and protection of parks, urban forestry and open sites.

The Corporation prepared an annual development plan for the works related to six urban services specified by the Government. The plan would have to be approved by the seven-member committee headed by Commissioner and Director of Municipal Administration.

The committee was likely to sanction Rs. 7.91 crore temporarily for the financial year 2010-11. Segregation unit at Nunna, vermi-compost plants, eco-friendly parks, development of bio-methanisation, green belts and e-learning schools were some of the proposals, Mr. Ravi Babu said, adding that the works were planned to be taken up over a span of five years.Mayor M.V. Ratna Bindu, MLC Ilapuram Venkaiah, Vijayawada Central MLA Malladi Vishnu, Deputy Mayor S. P. Gritton and others spoke.

Last Updated on Friday, 17 September 2010 11:00
 

Finance panel funds reduced

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The Hindu  15.09.2010

Finance panel funds reduced

Staff Reporter

VISAKHAPATNAM: The development programmes to be taken up with the funds provided under the 13 {+t} {+h} Finance Commission should be scaled down from Rs.375 crore to Rs.206 crore as the quantum (of funds) has been reduced, said Municipal Commissioner V.N. Vishnu

At a preparatory meeting on Tuesday ahead of the corporation general body meeting on September 18, he said that the APIIC had been asked to make a presentation on the purpose for which it wanted to transfer of some land for industrial parks at Tunglam, Fakir Takya and Aganampudi.

He said the GO on sanitation being implemented as night work was handed over under packages.

Steps should be taken to take up sanitation work on contract basis according to government orders. However, there should be no feeling of insecurity among workers.

For the modern lighting proposed between Hanumantavaka and Kommadi, government approval was required as the estimates crossed Rs.3 crore.

Mr. Vishnu directed Additional Commissioner (Finance) P. Purnachandra Rao to first take steps for payment of salaries to teachers and revision could be made after notional increments were sanctioned.

The ADC (F) said for 150 teachers the government had to grant notional increments and for the remaining July salaries would be released.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 15 September 2010 11:28
 

GHMC still in a financial mess

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The Times Of India      13.09.2010

GHMC still in a financial mess

HYDERABAD: Despite several steps taken to improve its financial health over the past year, the Greater Hyderabad Municipal Corporation (GHMC) seems to be still struggling to get out of the financial crisis.

GHMC sources said the civic body needs at least another Rs 1,500 crore to settle its liabilities, which includes Rs 527 crore for payment of its share for works being taken up under the Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission (JNNURM) and Rs 465 crore overdraft availed from a bank three years ago.

Apart from these commitments, the Hyderabad Metropolitan Water Supply and Sewerage Board (HMWS&SB) has sought Rs 130 crore as 25 per cent share in the property tax revenue. The municipal administration and urban development (MA&UD) department had issued a GO two years ago giving 25 per cent share to the Water Board, but the corporation has not paying it yet.

The Hyderabad Metropolitan Development Authority ( HMDA) has also been demanding nearly Rs 400 crore development charges being collected by the corporation from building permission applicants, which has been pending for the past three years.

Now, the GHMC is looking for a financial institute which can bail it out of the mess by lending a Rs 600-crore loan. GHMC in its last standing committee meeting has accorded permission to avail a loan of Rs 600 crore for payment of its urban local body (ULB) share for JNNURM works.

"The corporation is contemplating to take a loan from Hudco or any nationalised banks. The GHMC has written a letter for the approval to take the loan," GHMC additional commissioner (Finance) S Hari Krishna told TOI.

The civic body slipped into financial crisis after CVSK Sarma took over as GHMC commissioner, who had given sanctions of Rs 2,000 crore worth works in a year without considering the financial condition of the Corporation. About Rs 120 crore old pending bills were cleared to contractors by the corporation.

"Utmost important liability is payment of GHMC contribution for JNNURM works which comes to about Rs 527 crore. The Centre had sanctioned Rs 2,027 crore worth works like flyovers, nalas and Charminar Pedestrianisation Project (CPP) and housing project for GHMC since 2005. The amounts released by the Centre were spent on works. However, it did not release its share and managed the works by diverting funds released for other works like modernisation of nalas," a senior official of the corporation said.

Sources said GHMC commissioner Sameer Sharma had contemplated to hike the property tax by 30 per cent to garner more funds which was not agreed by the standing committee of the municipal corporation a week ago. Similarly, several austerity measures were taken up like fixing a cap of Rs 150 crore for each zone for the current fiscal.

However, analysts say the commissioner was imposing restrictions on development works and failed to control wasteful expenditure spent on corporators.

 


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