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Renovation of Ripon Building to end in March

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The Hindu      06.08.2010

Renovation of Ripon Building to end in March

Staff Reporter

CHENNAI: Work on renovating the Ripon Building, the headquarters of Chennai Corporation, will be completed in March, Mayor M. Subramanian said on Thursday.

Speaking to mediapersons after inspecting the work being carried out to conserve the architectural heritage of the building, he said the works were being taken up at a cost of Rs.7.70 crore with funds from the Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission. Mr.Subramanian said that the renovation had to be taken up as the roof was leaking and the weathering course had been damaged. Modern materials, including tiles and false ceiling, had been used over the years as a short-term measure.

Last Updated on Friday, 06 August 2010 05:00
 

Tambaram Municipality ‘cannot demand' property tax from MEPZ: Court

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The Business Line        05.08.2010

Tambaram Municipality ‘cannot demand' property tax from MEPZ: Court

Our Legal Correspondent

Chennai, Aug. 4

The Madras High Court has held that the Tambaram Municipality “cannot demand any property tax” from the Madras Export Processing Zone in respect of its administrative building situated on the National Highway, Tambaram.

Allowing a writ petition from the Union of India represented by the Development Commissioner of the Export Processing Zone challenging the notice dated March 6, 2002 issued by the Municipality demanding payment of property tax in respect of the administrative building of the Zone, Mr Justice K. Chandru referred to Article 285 of the Constitution which granted exemption of property of the Union from all taxes imposed by a State or by any authority within a State.

The Judge noted that the Supreme Court in the Municipal Corporation, Amritsar vs the Senior Superintendent of PO, Amritsar Division [reported in JT 2004(1) Sc 561], granted relief to the P & T Department, which had nine buildings in Amritsar Municipal Corporation. The appellant Corporation had issued notices to respondents for payment of service charges for providing various services such as water supply, street lighting, drainage and approach roads to land and buildings in the municipal area. The respondents had taken the matter to the High Court, which allowed the petition and the aforesaid notices were set aside. The very same question also came to be considered by this Court in respect of another Central Government establishment vide its judgment in the Principal Accountant General (Civil Audit), TN & Pondicherry Lekha Parikshah Bhavan, Chennai 600 018 vs the Commissioner, Corporation of Chennai, reported in 2010 (5) MLJ 241, the Judge said.

In the light of these legal precedents and in the teeth of Article 285 of the Constitution, the Tambaram Municipality could not demand any property tax from the petitioner, the Judge held. The writ petition would stand allowed.

Last Updated on Thursday, 05 August 2010 07:21
 

‘Rat’tled Chennai

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The Deccan Chronicle 05.08.2010

‘Rat’tled Chennai

Aug. 4: The pests are out in the open, fleeting past, taunting, tormenting and ensuring that they mock the citizens and the civic body responsible for the upkeep of the city. Their numbers are testimony to the failure of schemes aimed at eliminating them. The preponderance of rats and stray dogs in many parts of the city, particularly north Chennai, and the health harards they pose are what worried civic body officials have to counter.

Even as the civic body gears up for the latest onslaught on the healthy population of rats and stray dogs in the city, a Herculean task by the admission of official sources, there is a gnawing realisation that rats have brought the fight to its headquarters, the Ripon Buildings.

In the past 10 days, more than 200 rats have been killed in the building using pesticides. Aware that getting a fix on the rat population is beyond the scope of any sort of census; official sources admit that there is a long-drawn tussle ahead. While this battle is on, the corporation also has a dogfight to contend with.

The rats cause maximum damage to the footpaths and do not spare even the recently laid structures in Central Chennai, which have been dented due to burrows under these footpaths, say official sources.

Rajesh Lakhoni, the civic body commissioner, says, “The Chennai Corporation, which came out with a new initiative to eradicate rats in the city using vegetables laced with toxic gum has now planned to modify the schedule as a more efficient system is required to kill the rodents.” Soon the project will be expanded along the Otteri Nullah in north Chennai as the locality is noted for pest menace, he adds.

The objective of the project, which will cost about Rs 10 lakh, is to control the rat population and to reduce the incidence of leptospirosis and keep plague at bay. The private firm entrusted with eliminating the rats will be paid between Rs 2.5 and Rs 5 per kill.

Talking about efforts to control stray dogs, Mr Lakhoni says their status is under control. Stray dogs and cats are periodically operated for birth control and the civic body spends Rs 700 for each animal that is operated, he adds.

Last Updated on Thursday, 05 August 2010 06:23
 


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