The Times of India 06.05.2013
Property tax offices to be open on holidays
payment facility open during weekends this month. The move will help
citizens to avail of the tax discount scheme, which is open to property
owners who pay their taxes before May 31.
The civic body has offered a 10% discount on tax of Rs 25,000 or less and a 5% discount on the amount above Rs 25,001.
“The tax payments will be accepted at the collection centres in ward
offices and at the citizen facilitation centre in the PMC’s head office
in Shivajinagar,” a press release issued by the civic body said.
Citizens will be able to make payments between 10 am and 2 pm on holidays.
Property tax is one of the main sources of revenue for the civic body.
The department handles the billing and collection of property tax on
residential, commercial, plots and other types of properties – held
privately or by the government (state and central) – within the civic
limits.
Property tax is charged on immovable property, such as
land, buildings and any permanent improvement. It may also include
building tax plus service taxes such as street tax and conservancy or
scavenging tax. The tax is collected either half yearly or annually.
There are around 7 lakh residential properties and 75,000
non-residential properties and around 24,000 open plots in the city.
The civic body had decided to involve women’s self-help groups
(SHGs) and NGOs in distribution of property tax bills. It helped
increase the collection by three times this year, so far, as compared to
the previous fiscal.
“The civic administration wants to
improve bill distribution so that more citizens pay them on time. So, a
target-based system for bill distribution has been set up wherein the
NGOs and women self-help groups have been engaged to carry out the
work,” Hemant Nikam, the head of PMC’s property tax department, had
said.
The civic administration will charge a penalty of 2 per cent per month from citizens who pay property tax after May 31.
The collection of the property tax department has gathered more
significance this year as the PMC has done away with the octroi tax,
which was one of the key revenue sources for the PMC.
The
administration has collected nearly Rs 115 crore from property tax in
the first month of the new fiscal, i.e. April 2013. On an average, it
collects around Rs 600 crore per annum from the tax, which is an average
of Rs 50 crore per month.
The property tax department has been
embroiled in controversy over the billing distribution system. Many
property users have complaints about not getting the property tax bills
on time. Many property owners claim that they could not get the benefit
of the discount scheme as they have not got their property bills on
time.
With an aim to overcome this problem, the PMC has taken a
decision to involve women’s self-help groups (SHGs) and NGOs in
distribution of property tax bills.