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Margao municipal council yet to collect revenue of 4.73cr

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The Times of India    31.07.2012

Margao municipal council yet to collect revenue of 4.73cr

MARGAO: Rupees four crore, seventy three lakh and twenty thousand; and still counting.That's the amount due to the Margao municipal council (MMC) by way of house tax and shop rentals.However, for the recovery team of the MMC headed by Anil Bandodkar, it's an arduous, yet thankless job to trace the thousands of houses and deliver demand notices to the defaulting owners.

"It's not an easy task by any standards. Yet, for the last one year or so, we have managed to recover substantial outstandings, as we have succeeded in persuading the defaulters to pay up. On an average, an amount of 35-40 lakh is being recovered every month," said an officer of the taxation department, who is a part of the recovery team.

What has added to the problems of the recovery team is that in many cases, the addresses of the house owners as entered in the MMC records are either wrong or illegible.

"It happens so very often that we climb up stairs upto the third floor only to find that somebody else is staying in the given address. We then have to make enquiries and track down the real owner's house to deliver the demand notice," an official said, requesting anonymity.

Accounts and taxation officer, Damodar Yelekar, when contacted, attributed the issue of incorrect addresses to the "faulty" procedure being followed by the MMC years ago.

"This may have happened because the occupancy certificates were issued first and the assessment for house tax was done much later, perhaps without even physically verifying the addresses. This has also led to many houses escaping the tax net. However, we have done away with this method now. Assessment of houses for the purpose of house tax is now done at the time of issuing the occupancy certificates itself," Yelekar told TOI.

As regards the steps taken by the MMC to expedite the recovery process, Yelekar said that tough measures will be taken against the defaulters soon.

"We have issued demand notices to several hundreds of house owners who have accumulated huge arrears of house tax. They have been given a time of upto 15 days to clear the tax bills. However, if they fail to do so within this time, 'warrants of distress' will be issued to them and a further 15 days of time to pay up.

If they still fail to cough up the money in that period, the MMC will be then free to attach the property of the defaulter in a bid to recover the outstanding. The chief officer has already issued necessary instructions in that regard to the taxation department," Yelekar said.

The MMC is also facing a rather odd situation on the house tax front. While there are around 40,000 households that are assessed for house tax, sources said, there would be at least 15,000 to 20,000 more houses which do not have any house numbers. The MMC's attempt at bringing those unassessed houses into the tax net a few years ago ended in a fiasco as the task was aborted mid-way.

If Margao municipal council cannot find houses in its jurisdiction, who can be expected to? It is the council that issues occupancy certificates and asses the houses for tax purposes. If they can't find the houses it implies that inspections were never carried out. It is not enough for the administration to now attempt to set things right, what is required is the political will to collect the huge amount of outstanding tax arrears. Only then will the exercise bear fruit.

Last Updated on Tuesday, 31 July 2012 11:32
 

Proposed industrial township authorities welcomed

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The Hindu            30.07.2012

Proposed industrial township authorities welcomed

R. Krishna Kumar

Stakeholders in Mysore feel that the move will boost development of industrial areas in city

Manufacturing hub:There are over 2,000 industrial units, small, medium and large in Mysore.— PHOTO: M.A. SRIRAM
Manufacturing hub:There are over 2,000 industrial units, small, medium and large in Mysore.— PHOTO: M.A. SRIRAM

 

The proposed constitution of industrial township authorities at the local level for administering industrial areas has been welcomed by the stakeholders here.

The constitution of the local industrial authorities or township authorities was hinted at by M.N. Vidyashankar, Principal Secretary, Industries and Commerce and Chairman, Karnataka Industrial Area Development Board (KIADB), here on Saturday

The move, once implemented, is expected to give a boost to the development of industrial areas in Mysore, some of which lack basic amenities despite housing a large cluster of industries.

Suresh Kumar Jain, general secretary, Mysore Industries Association (MIA), told The Hindu that none of the industrial areas in Mysore, including Hootagalli, Metagalli, Belawadi, have been provided with basic amenities or civic services.

Despite the fact that the industrial layouts employ thousands of people who work here round the clock, , the authorities have not provided treated water to the factories. “Raw water can be used only for industrial usage and is unfit for human consumption. Our repeated demands for supplying drinking water have been ignored over the years,” said Mr. Jain.

The MCC council in December 2011 had rejected a request from BEML — which is one of the major companies in Mysore – seeking supply of 3 lakh litres of water per day on the grounds that it could affect the supply to the city and wanted the proposal to be withheld till the Kabini water works was commissioned. Likewise, in 2006, a group of entrepreneurs in the Nanjangud industrial area had pooled resources for maintenance of civic amenities including asphalting the approach road, planting trees and maintenance of street lights as they were tired with the indifference of the civic authorities and the KIADB. Meanwhile, the industries in Mysore have received notices from the MCC to pay property tax at commercial rates. Expressing surprise over the development, Mr. Jain said most industries in and around Metagalli have received the notices though they were part of the local gram panchayats and the MCC did not have jurisdiction over them. Resisting the move, entrepreneurs questioned the rationale for demanding tax from the industries when the money is used for providing amenities elsewhere. “The industrial area being non-residential, money is spent on residential areas of the city. While we had no objections to the local authorities collecting taxes and spend it anywhere in the city, they ignore genuine demands of the industrial areas,” said Mr. Jain. There are more than 2,000 industrial units – small, medium and large – and taxes are paid to the KIADB towards maintenance, trade licence and renewal fee to the MCC, mandatory clearance from various departments including the pollution control board but without amenities in return. “However, once the local industrial township authority comes into being, taxes will be payable to it and the industrial township authority will be responsible for providing all civic amenities to the area under its jurisdiction,” said Mr. Jain. This includes regulating the location of factories based on whether they are electrical, manufacturing, chemical and food processing apart from providing civic amenities.

  • No industrial area in Mysore has been provided basic amenities
  • Factories in the city are not even supplied drinking water
 

Comprehensive sewerage network need of the hour

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The Hindu     26.07.2012

Comprehensive sewerage network need of the hour

V.Geetanath  

Encroachment of water bodies, inadequate stormwater drain capacity lead to flooding in low-lying areas during the recent rain

It is not enough to widen stormwater drains (‘nalas’) by removing encroachments to prevent large scale inundation during heavy rains. The issue of illegal occupation of tank beds and ensuring a comprehensive sewerage network for the entire city is as much vital, say senior officials.

While last Friday’s rain havoc has not only showcased the inadequate stormwater drain capacity leading to flooding in several low lying areas (26), 43 colonies coming under the Full Tank Level (FTL) of 17 water bodies too face inundation.

Massive dislocation

Due to undulating terrain of the twin cities, excess rain water drains off due to gravity usually. Yet, with rapid urbanisation, disappearance of tanks, low absorbing capacity of the ground and lack of separate sewer lines is leading to massive dislocation, they explain.

“We should stop gloating about underground drainage in the core city because sewer lines have been directly linked to stormwater drains everywhere indiscriminately. Suburbs do not have any underground sewage network save for a few parts of Serilingampally and Kukatpally,” they aver.

A glaring example of ills of not having proper sewer network in the suburbs where the population has doubled in the last decade is pollution of water bodies due to sewage flow. The colonies sewer lines in these places are linked to the tanks and with constant sewage flow, they cannot take any fresh inflows during a rain.

With houses very much built within the FTL, inundations happen. While constructions on the lake beds are clearly unauthorised as in Nadeem Colony; there are also sites where the layout has official sanction such as Nector Gardens abutting Durgam Cheruvu, from the erstwhile Hyderabad Urban Development Authority (HUDA).

This intermingling of sewer lines with stormwater pipelines and open drains becomes evident considering the rapid flow of water after a rain. “The continuous flow inside stormwater drains even during dry weather is indication of the lack of will or insufficient funds leading to quick fixes such as connecting sewer lines,” they say.

Bad roads

It not only causes flooding during the monsoon but damages roads too. Continuous flow of water even on some of the main thoroughfares as in Punjagutta due to leaks from overflowing drains spoils the road surface needing recarpetting every year at considerable cost.

“A multi-pronged strategy is needed to tackle flooding during a heavy rainfall. It should begin with demolishing at least some of the constructions that have come up on the lake beds, protecting the FTLs by fencing, laying extensive underground sewage and remodelling storm water drains,” senior officials affirm.

A Rs.2, 000 crore plan has been made for a new sewage network but has been hanging fire for want of funds. Its time for the government to take it up before another deluge hits us.

 


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