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Tamil Nadu News Papers

Property tax: old city areas may pay more

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The Hindu          24.10.2014 

Property tax: old city areas may pay more

With the Chennai Corporation considering a proposal to revise property tax rates on the basis of current guideline values, residents wonder what the impact on their expenses will be.

Some neighbourhoods in the recently-added areas of the Chennai Corporation pay the same property tax as those in well-developed areas such as T. Nagar that fetch high rental values, experts said, pointing to anomalies.

Residents of such neighbourhoods with low guideline value pay the same amount of property tax as neighbourhoods with high guideline values every half year.

A chunk of the 11 lakh residential and commercial properties which have relatively lower property tax rates are within the old city limits. The civic body will map all such roads to asses the loss of revenue because of the existing system. Based on a study, the civic body will rationalise and revise property tax rates.

Property tax is around 30 per cent of the total revenue of the civic body. The increase in property tax collection is likely to result in a rise in per capita capital expenditure. Chennai spends less than Rs. 2,000 per resident, much lower compared to developed cities.

A chunk of the 11 lakh residential and commercial properties which have relatively lower tax rates are within the old city limits

 

 

Property tax may go up

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The Hindu        24.10.2014  

Property tax may go up

The Chennai Corporation is planning to link property tax with the current guideline values, instead of old base rates finalised in 1998. This is likely to increase the property tax rates across the city.

Following complaints from residents pertaining to anomalies and inconsistencies in the base rates, the civic body is planning to request the State government to amend the Chennai City Municipal Corporation Act to revise the property tax every year based on current guideline values.

The civic body continues to calculate property tax, based on the annual rental value of a property and on base rates fixed 16 years ago.

 

Municipal schools get smart boards

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The Hindu            17.10.2014   

Municipal schools get smart boards

Devices have many resources that can serve as teaching tools

Krishnagiri Municipality has provided Municipal schools with liquid crystal display (LCD) touch screen smart boards as teaching tools.

To upgrade academic teaching tools, nine schools – including two Urdu schools and seven higher secondary and middle schools – have been provided with smart boards to enhance the classroom learning experience.

When connected to a laptop, the interactive white board, ‘Smart’, becomes a touch-sensitive surface, much like the screen of a smart phone.

Using inbuilt software ‘Active Inspire’, the device enables the teacher to highlight, erase and draw, among other actions, says R.Aravind, Proprietor of Future Era, the Coimbatore-based company that has supplied the Canadian-brand.

‘Smart board’ has a combination of over five lakh inbuilt resources that come as handy teaching tools. The teacher can select and drag a dissected heart, explain the functioning of the left artery or select a map or a historic place, as the case may be, to make the students understand, says Mr.Aravind.

“We have provided similar boards to Corporation schools in Salem. But they require electromagnetic pens. But, Krishnagiri is the first Municipality to have a touch board, making it user-friendly,” says Mr.Aravind.

In schools that have Internet facility, there can be live downloads to aid learning. The total package costs about Rs.1.5 lakh, inclusive of board, projector and installation material.

Sources said that the real challenge is in imparting training to teachers. Future Era has proposed two levels of training – a basic one and an intermediate level one – to explore more tools in the software. The software can recognise handwriting and convert it into text. Any language, including Tamil or Urdu can be used as the teaching medium.

K.C. Thangamuthu, Muncipality chairperson, told The Hindu , “This was the former Chief Minister’s vision, and we have implemented it. We will now train teachers to use the tool.”

 


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