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Taxation

Building tax to be based on zones

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The Hindu          18.11.2011

Building tax to be based on zones

Staff Reporter

City divided into three zones

The Kochi Corporation will collect building tax based on zoning of the city area. The authorities have also classified the city area into three zones for fixing the tax.

Draft notified

A draft document classifying the city into primary, secondary and tertiary zones based on development has been notified.

The primary zone covers those places where government and quasi-government offices, trade and commercial centres, educational institutions, markets, bus stands and hospitals are located. The corporation divisions one to 11 and 29 to 74 are included in the zone.

The secondary zone covers the areas adjoining the primary zone and those areas which possess scope for development.

The areas which lack infrastructure facilities and are scarcely populated are included in the third category. The corporation divisions 15, 18, 23, 24, 26 and 27 are included in the category.

Residential buildings will be charged at the rate of Rs.20 per sq. metre whereas hotels, shops and godowns of area up to 100 sq. metres will have to pay tax at the rate of Rs.90 per sq. metre. Individual houses, apartments and flats have been included in residential buildings. The buildings owned by ex-Servicemen and their dependants have been exempted from the tax net. The tax will also be fixed based on the materials used for construction.

The authorities have decided to collect the tax with effect from April 1, 2011.


  • Residential buildings to be charged Rs.20 per sq. m
  • Shops with up to 100 sq. m area to pay Rs.90 per sq. m
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    GVMC to issue noticeto VSP on VLT

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    The Hindu          28.06.2011

    GVMC to issue noticeto VSP on VLT

    Staff Reporter

    Municipal Commissioner B. Ramanjaneyulu has directed GVMC officials to issue a notice to the Visakhapatnam Steel Plant on non-payment of vacant land tax (VLT) to the tune of Rs.93 crore.

    During a review of the revenue of the corporation on Monday, he was told that the VSP was paying only 50 per cent of the property tax, pending a case in the High Court. The Commissioner expressed his disapproval at VLT not being collected and directed the Deputy Commissioner of Revenue to issue a notice on it. Setting targets for the revenue wing, Mr. Ramanjaneyulu said a total of Rs.300 crore should be realised without any additional burden on taxpayers.

     

    ‘Corporation's online calculator overestimates property tax'

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    The Hindu          15.06.2011

    ‘Corporation's online calculator overestimates property tax'

    Staff Correspondent

    Owners of multistoreyed buildings may be paying more: MGP

    The Mysore City Corporation (MCC) provides a calculator on its website, www.mysorecity.gov.in/ ptisnn/citizen/Before CreateCitizen Sas.do#, which is supposed to calculate property tax. “But, for multistoreyed buildings, the calculator overestimates tax. The calculator is not just incorrect, but it also violates laws,” claimed the Mysore Grahakara Parishat (MGP).

    According to Section 109 of the Karnataka Municipal Corporations Act, 1976, property tax is assessed on value of the building plus value of the land it is built on. Vacant land around the building is exempt from tax.

    “The MCC's calculator calculates value of land for each floor of the building. For a multistoreyed building, the value of the land and the tax on it must be calculated only once as all floors of the building stand on the same land, but the calculator does it for each floor, thus overestimating the tax. Owners of such buildings who use the MCC calculator are paying higher property tax than they should,” according to P.M. Bhat of MGP. The calculator — as well as all MCC property records — measures dimensions in feet. It is amazing that even after 50 years of banning this British unit of measurement and adopting the metric system, MCC has still not adopted it, he said.

    “The Standards of Weights and Measures Act, 1956, had made metre the official unit of length in India. The Government and the public were given a grace period of six years to switch to the metric system. In fact, Section 80 of the Standards of Weights and Measures Act, 1976 (which replaced the 1956 Act) mandated that non-metric measures should not even be stated in any enactment, notification, rule or order of the Government,” Mr. Bhat said in a press release here.

    In fact, using a calculator to calculate property tax afresh every year was itself illegal, he claimed. Section 109A of the KMC Act said property tax shall not be assessed each year but shall stand enhanced by 15 per cent once every three years.


  • ‘It calculates value of land for each floor, when it should be done just once'

  • MCC has still not adopted the metric system

  • Last Updated on Wednesday, 15 June 2011 05:41
     


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