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Now, LBT and water tax defaulters to 'face music'

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The Times of India            04.02.2014

Now, LBT and water tax defaulters to 'face music'

PUNE: After the property tax defaulters, it is time for water tax and LBT defaulters to face the music as the civic administration is planning to introduce the 'band bajao' drive for other services too.

"The response of the property tax has been good. Huge recovery has been made during the drive. So, from next financial year onwards, the civic administration is planning to introduce the drive for other services as well," said Rajendra Jagtap, additional commissioner of PMC, while speaking to reporters on Monday.

The Pune Municipal Corporation's (PMC) decision to rope in brass bands to recover dues from property tax defaulters has paid rich dividends. In the four months, from September to December last year, the civic body mopped up property tax dues worth Rs 72 crore through the drive.

The bands were hired to play loud music in front of houses of the defaulters, shaming the owners into clearing their dues. Officials from the property tax department accompany the bands to collect the payments.

The drive was launched in March 2013 on an experimental basis. After getting a good response, the drive was resumed in September. The civic body uses six brass bands to work in different wards across the city and pays them as much as Rs 20 lakh a year.

 

1.5 lakh residents living on forest land no longer 'encroachers'

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The Times of India            04.02.2014

1.5 lakh residents living on forest land no longer 'encroachers'

THANE: More than 1.50 lakh people residing in close to 200 housing complexes within the Thane municipal corporation limits will no longer be referred to as 'encroachers' on private forest land as the swanky towers on these lands has been regularised by the Supreme Court last week.

The much-awaited SC judgement will free over 1,742 acres land in the city from the tag of being illegal occupants on forest land, as declared by the state revenue department in 2001.

The SC verdict has also brought smiles on the faces of those living in the high-rise buildings at Ovala as more than 987 acres of land was classified as private forest by the state revenue department, officials from the Thane forest division said. Yeoor area, along Pokran Road 2, will also benefit by this move as more than 156 acres of land was delisted from the old classification of private forest land.

''Many buildings have come up on these lands after getting a clearance from the TMC. However, the legal status of residents was under dispute after the Bombay high court had some time ago upheld the action of the revenue and forest department to declare private forests in Thane city,'' a forest official told TOI.

The residents of Vasant Leela and Garden Court complexes along the Ghodbunder road were among the petitioners who contested the state government's decision of declaring their plots as private forest lands.

''In 2009, the Central Empowered Committee recommended that residents of these illegal housing complexes pay an afforestation fee between Rs 6 to Rs 12 per sqft, depending on when the building was constructed. We collectively paid Rs 62 lakh as fine. Now that the judgement has proved that the state government's decision was not in keeping with the law, the state government should refund the money,'' a resident of Garden Court said.

The SC judgement will also benefit industrial units at Wada and Shahapur talukas of Thane district where land rates had crashed after it was declared as private forests. ''We were incurring major losses because of poor manufacturing and to add to our woes the land cost crashed. There were no buyers and many units weremanufacturing was ordered shut by the forest officials as it was notified as private forests,'' said Chetan Koli, who owns a defunct unit at Wada. 

 

Civic body to amend housing laws, could change cityscape

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The Times of India            04.02.2014

Civic body to amend housing laws, could change cityscape

THANE: Imagine, you are standing in your kitchen, living room, dining room and a bathroom, all rolled into one tiny, compact apartment! This is how housing tenements in Thane would look like in future with a single building consisting of hundreds of 'micro-apartments', and little or no restriction on internal construction of an apartment under the prevalent housing laws.

The Thane Municipal Corporation (TMC) is amending the city's housing laws to remove as many as 25 conditions under the development control rules (DCR) that currently regulate micro detailing of a tenement, such as the size and area of a single room, height and width of kitchen, bathroom, loft, mezzanine floor, partitions, among many others.

The move could change the way apartments are constructed in Thane, where currently there is a high density of tenements of a single room, bordering the city on overcrowding. The number of dwelling rooms in census houses is less, with majority of houses (59%) having one-dwelling rooms or less showing the extent of overcrowding in Thane.

By making the changes, the corporation also wants to put the onus of micro detailing on either the housing society or shared between the developer and the buyer. Sources in the corporation said this will allow the TMC to opt out of adjudicating petty disputes of internal changes and modifications for which it is forced to at the moment issue notices under the Maharashtra Regional Town Planning (MRTP) Act. It can then divert machinery on violations of floor space index (FSI) instead of those related to internal changes and modifications, said officials.

Once the changes are made, the modified DCR will also ensure developers make and sell better constructed apartments instead of passing them off into certain categories of one, one-and-half or two-BHK (bedroom, hall, and kitchen).

"He (developer) just constructs a one-room flat, but cuts off a part into a study room, later sells it as a one-and--half BHK. The new rules will ensure builder makes only those homes that are habitable under the law at the same time saleable," said a senior officer of the TMC town planning department who is working on the new law.

Globally, housing norms rarely regulate internal space of an apartment to get the most of the available tenement area. The concept of minimum internal regulation or waiving of zoning has been taken as a measure to create more space for single people and protection against overcrowding.

"If you look at tenements that are being sold in low-budget areas such as Govandi, you would think they are being sold as a single khoka. This simply means apart from the area enclosed under the four walls, the rest of the construction is managed by the buyer. If this is applied in the rest of the city, with better control of course, we could make compact homes with little or no room for disputes," said an official of the TMC town planning department.

 


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