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General Administration

Municipal corporation decides to streamline tax collection

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The New Indian Express                17.08.2013

Municipal corporation decides to streamline tax collection

At present, GHMC is collecting property tax using HHC.
At present, GHMC is collecting property tax using HHC.

The Greater Hyderabad Municipal Corporation has decided to streamline the tax collection operations.

It has invited request for proposal (RFP) for collection of property tax, trade licence fee, advertisement tax, estate collection, profession tax, etc, using hand-held computers (HHC). It plans to automate the services and make it online and use of HHC will facilitate collections under different services or heads by a single bill collector.

GHMC officials told Express that firms should provide HHC with necessary operating system and application software for all types of revenue collections using a single device. One single device to be provided for every docket (about 4,000 property assessments). The technical bids will be opened on September 13 and commercial bids will be opened later.

At present, GHMC is collecting property tax using HHC. All the five zones have been divided into 334 dockets, each with 4,000 assessed properties and one bill collector with HHC.

The GHMC has five zones, 18 circles, 150 wards and several localities in wards. It collects taxes, fees, penalty from citizens under different heads. Each ward or combination of wards will have an inspector and bill collector.

The automation will consist of two stages. The first is the development of an integrated application to be run on any model/make of HHC to issue and collect  demand notices for property tax, trade licence, advertisement tax, estate collection, profession tax etc. The developed application will be owned by GHMC. The second stage includes operation and execution of the project by providing the requisite number of HHCs along with qualified operators for about three years.

 HHC will get the area citizen master data with tax details. The in-charge chooses service for which a transaction will be carried out and will be able to generate memo, collect tax/penalty and manage survey/new registration.

The firms have to equip the HHC with necessary operating system and application software for revenue collections using a single device. A single device will be provided for a docket.

 

BDA holds survey of religious structures on government land

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The Hindu               17.08.2013

BDA holds survey of religious structures on government land

A temple situated right between a mall and a busy road in Bhubaneswar. —Photo: Lingaraj Panda
A temple situated right between a mall and a busy road in Bhubaneswar. —Photo: Lingaraj Panda

With unauthorised religious structures sprouting unchecked on government lands, the Bhubaneswar Development Authority has undertaken an extensive survey of such structures in the capital city.

Once survey is completed, the BDA would submit the report to the Revenue and Disaster Management for exploring the legal means to clear the encroachments.

“We have appointed three amins to carry out survey of religious structures on government land in BDA area. They would point out extent of government land encroached upon for erecting these structures,” said BDA enforcement officer Sarita Dhanwar here on Friday.

RDM department had sought a report regarding removal, relocation and regularisation of unauthorised religious structures on public land.

“There has not been any clear-cut instruction regarding clearing encroachment. If government orders for removing encroachment, we would enforce the order,” Ms Dhanwar said.

One of the most commonly adopted tricks to encroach land and exploit it commercially in Bhubaneswar is to establish a religious structure especially temple.

A good number of temples have come up in Niladri Vihar, Chandrasekharpur, Khandagiri, Damana, Pokhariput and Aiginia area in the State.

A top RDM department official said although Supreme Court had taken a stringent view on encroachment of public land by way of establishing shrines, the government had not been able to make those lands encroachment-free.

A temple in Niladri Vihar area continued to get bigger in size even though more than five letters were communicated between RDM department and General Administration Department for removal of the encroachment between 2010 and 2012.

A small temple was established on a small patch of land in Niladri Vihar in early 2000. In 2008, the temple was demolished by GA department, BDA and Bhubaneswar Municipal Corporation.

Ironically, after 2009 Supreme Court verdict that says no authorised construction should be carried out or permitted in the name of temple, church, mosque or gurudwar on public streets, public parks and other public land, a bigger temple came up on the same place. By 2012, the temple premise was spread over two to three acres.

Encroachment of public land does not confine to perform religious activities. In due course of time, the premises of religious structures are used for organising social parties such as marriages and birthday.

It will submit report to Revenue and Disaster Management Department.

 

Hyderabad water thieves to face criminal cases from today

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The Times of India             16.08.2013

Hyderabad water thieves to face criminal cases from today

HYDERABAD: Henceforth, criminal cases will be booked against property owners who have illegal water connections. The Hyderabad Metropolitan Water Supply and Sewerage Board (HMWS&SB) has asked all its managers to start booking criminal cases from Friday.

The Water Board has already discussed with Hyderabad police commissioner Anurag Sharma its drive and sought his cooperation in reining in the menace by directing his officials to receive complaints lodged by the board authorities and book criminal cases against water thieves.

HMWS&SB managing director J Syamala Rao said the managers have to take photographs as proof after identifying the illegal connection before disconnecting it. The managers concerned have to stick to a prescribed format to lodge a complaint. Also it's mandatory to enclose the photograph of the illegal water connection with the complaint.

In the complaint addressed to the station house officer (SHO), the Water Board official would request the official to register a case under Section 52 read with Section 49 (1), (b), (c) of the HMWS&SB Act 1989, and Section 430 of the IPC and Section 3 (2) (a) of the Prevention of Damage to Public Property Act 1984 against those having illegal water connection.

"The Water Board authorities have already identified at least five to 10 cases in each division for booking criminal cases from Friday.

The managers concerned have to submit action taken report every Monday to the general managers concerned and they in turn would be sending them to the director-revenue," a senior HMWS&SB official told TOI.

The Water Board would simultaneously start invoking the Revenue Recovery (RR) Act to seize assets of long-time defaulters, the official said.

HMWS&SB managing director J Syamala Rao said the managers have to take photographs as proof after identifying the illegal connection before disconnecting it. Also it's mandatory to enclose the photograph of the illegal water connection with the complaint.  

 


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