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Greater Chennai Corporation

Greater Chennai Corporation (GCC)[1] is a local government for the City of Chennai in the Chennai Metropolitan Area of Tamil Nadu, India. Inaugurated on 29 September 1688, under a royal charter issued by King James II of England on 30 December 1687 as the Corporation of Madras, it is the oldest municipal body of the Commonwealth of Nations outside Great Britain.[2][3] It is the largest municipal corporation in Tamil Nadu with an area of 426 km2. It is headed by a mayor, who presides over 200 councillors, each of whom represents one of the 200 wards of the city.[4] It is the second oldest corporation in the world after the City of London.[5] The city limits, which had been expanded several times over the years, is currently coterminous with the Chennai district. It is one of the four municipal corporations located within the Chennai Metropolitan Area, the other three being the Tambaram Corporation, Avadi City Municipal Corporation and Kanchipuram Municipal Corporation.

Greater Chennai Corporation

Perunakara Ceṉṉai Mānakarāṭci
Emblem of the Greater Chennai Corporation
Type
Type
History
Founded29 September 1688
(335 years ago)
 (1688-09-29)
Leadership
Priya Rajan, DMK
since 4 March 2022
Mahesh Kumar, DMK
since 4 March 2022
M.Aruna, IAS
Structure
Seats200
Political groups
Government (178)
  •   DMK (153)
  •   INC (13)
  •   CPI(M) (4)
  •   VCK (4)
  •   MDMK (2)
  •   CPI (1)
  •   IUML (1)

Opposition (22)

Meeting place
Ripon Building, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India
Website
chennaicorporation.gov.in

History edit

The Madras Corporation is the oldest municipal body of the Commonwealth of Nations outside the United Kingdom. It was formed in 1688 to control the powers of the Governor of Madras, Elihu Yale.[6] The corporation was created by a Royal Charter issued on 30 December 1687 by King James II on the advice of the chairman of the East India Company, Josiah Child, on the model of Dutch Government in the East Indies.[7] The charter constituted the existing town of Fort St. George and all the territories belonging to the town, not exceeding a distance of ten miles from the Fort, into a Corporation. The Parliamentary Act of 1792 conferred the new Corporation power to levy municipal taxes in the city. The municipal administration also commenced from this act, making provision for the administration of the city. The Municipal Act continued to be amended, constantly introducing major changes in the constitution and powers of the corporation from time to time.[7]

Prior to the establishments of the corporation, the Governor of Madras or the company's agent managed the affairs of the Fort St George and its residents with the assistance of a headman, an accountant, and the head of watch and ward. The Governor sat as Madras's Justice of the Peace. Taxes were introduced by Governor Streynsham Master (1678–1681). Complications arising out of these impositions and the growing expenses of an expanding town led to Sir Josiah drawing up plans for a more formal body of civic administration. The corporation was inaugurated on 29 September 1688 with power to decide on petty cases, levy rates upon the inhabitants for building of schools, a town hall and a jail, when the new Mayor, 12 Aldermen and 60 Burgesses took their oaths.[7] The first members of the corporation were representatives from diverse ethnicities. Nathaniel Higginson was the first Mayor, and he appointed representatives from the English, Scottish, French, Portuguese, and Indian mercantile communities as Aldermen. The post of the Mayor was held for one year at a time, the Mayor being elected by the Aldermen, whose term of office was for life.

By 1856, the duties of the Corporation became more clearly defined. In 1919, the Aldermen were re-styled as 'Councillors'. The title of 'Mayor' had been replaced by 'President', and P. Theagaraya Chetty was nominated as president, the first Indian to be so chosen. However, the office of Mayor was re-created in 1933, when Kumararajah M. A. Muthiah Chettiar made the transition from last President to first new Mayor. The mayoralty has remained thereafter.

By 1901, the corporation had grown to encompass an area of 68 sq km comprising 30 territorial divisions with a population of 540,000.[8] In 1913, the Corporation moved to the newly constructed Ripon Building, which was built on parts of the People's Park. The building was named after Lord Ripon who, as Viceroy of India from 1880 to 1884, had introduced local government reforms. He is remembered in a statue in the Corporation precincts. The first native Indian to both govern the Madras Presidency and later serve as Mayor of erstwhile Madras was the Honourable K. Sriramulu Naidu, who served during the 1930s and 1940s. In 1978, the boundaries of the area administered by the corporation was increased to 174 sq km.[8]

The Madras Municipal Corporation Act, 1919 (as amended) provides the basic statutory authority for the administration now.[7]

Zone edit

Expansion edit

In October 2011, the expansion process was initiated before the elections to the corporation council in October. In this, 42 small local bodies, including 9 municipalities, 8 town panchayats and 25 village panchayats, were merged with Chennai Corporation, taking the area up by 140% to 426 km2 from the earlier 176 km2.[8][9] Some areas have been arbitrarily left out, to the discontent of the residents of those areas.[10] The new expanded Corporation of Chennai has 200 wards, an increase of 45 wards.[11] Elections were held for the expanded corporation in October 2011.

The erstwhile municipalities that became a part of expanded Chennai Corporation are Kathivakkam, Tiruvottiyur, Manali, Madhavaram, Ambattur, Maduravoyal, Valasaravakkam, Alandur and UllagaramPuzhuthivakkam.

The erstwhile town panchayats that became a part of expanded Chennai Corporation are Chinnasekkadu, Puzhal, Porur, Nandambakkam, Meenambakkam, Perungudi, Pallikaranai and Sholinganallur.

The erstwhile panchayat unions that became a part of expanded Chennai Corporation are Edayanchavadi, Sadayankuppam, Kadapakkam, Theeyampakkam, Mathur, Vadaperumbakkam, Surapet, Kathirvedu, Puthagaram, Nolambur, Karambakkam, Nerkundram, Ramapuram, Mugalivakkam, Manapakkam, Kottivakkam, Palavakkam, Neelankarai, Injambakkam, Karapakkam, Okkiam Thoraipakkam, Madipakkam, Jalladiampet, Semmanchery and Uthandi.

Administration edit

City officials, as of March 2022 
Mayor Priya Rajan
Deputy Mayor M. Mahesh Kumar
Corporation Commissioner J. Radhakrishnan
Commissioner of Police Sandeep Rai Rathore

From among themselves, the councillors elect the mayor and a deputy mayor who preside over about 10 standing committees.[12] The council normally meets once a month. The executive wing is headed by the Commissioner. In addition, there are deputy commissioners, various heads of departments and 15 zonal officers.[7]

The first native Indian to govern the Madras Presidency as well as serve later as the first Mayor post-independence of erstwhile Madras was L. Sriramulu Naidu. Chennai, the capital of Tamil Nadu state, houses the state executive and legislative headquarters primarily in the Secretariat Buildings on the Fort St George campus but also in several other buildings in the city. The Madras High Court, whose jurisdiction extends across Tamil Nadu and Puducherry, is the highest judicial authority in the state. The district of Chennai has four parliamentary constituencies—Chennai North, Chennai Central, Chennai South and Sriperumbudur, which elects 29 members of the legislative assembly (MLAs) to the state legislature.

The metropolitan region of Chennai covers many suburbs that are part of Chengalpattu, Kanchipuram and Thiruvallur districts. The larger suburbs are governed by town municipalities, and the smaller ones are governed by town councils called panchayats. While the city covers an area of 174 km2 (67 mi2),[13] the metropolitan area is spread over 1,189 km2 (458 mi2).[14] The Chennai Metropolitan Development Authority (CMDA) has drafted a Second Master Plan that aims to develop satellite townships around the city. Contiguous satellite towns include Mahabalipuram to the south, Chengalpattu and Maraimalai Nagar to the southwest, and Kanchipuram, Sriperumpudur, Tiruvallur and Arakkonam to the west.

Administrative divisions edit

 
15 zones of the Chennai Corporation after expansion

The city is classified into three regions: North Chennai, Central Chennai and South Chennai.[15] It is further divided into 15 zones, consisting of 200 wards.[16] The newly annexed areas were divided into 93 wards, and the remaining 107 wards were created out of the original 155 within the old city limits.[17] As of September 2011, the new wards are yet to be named.[16] Out of the 200 wards, 26 were reserved for scheduled castes and scheduled tribes and 58 were reserved for women.[17]

The 23 Zones are:

Departments edit

The corporation has the following departments:[18]

S.No. Department Headed by Responsibility
1 Council Council Secretary Functions as the Secretariat of the council, the Mayor and the various standing committees. Aids the Mayor in the discharge of his duties as well as the Council and Standing Committees.
2 General Administration Assistant Commissioner In charge of the personnel and administrative matters for the corporation as a whole
3 Financial Management Financial Adviser Preparation of Corporation budget, receiving loans and grants from the government and overseeing and controlling the expenses of the Corporation
4 Land & Estate District Revenue Officer Leasing out Corporation lands and buildings and renting out shopping complexes
5 Revenue Revenue Officer Collection of taxes such as property, professional, advertisement, parking fees and other taxes. At the head office, change of name of ownership of properties, revision petitions against fixation of tax review of progress in collection of taxes and scrutiny and approval of assessment proposals.
6 Works City Engineer Town planning, sanction of plan and permits (up to first floor) for industrial and residential buildings, and maintenance of private streets and central asphalt plant and central yard.
7 Mechanical Engineering Superintending Engineer (Mechanical) Purchase and maintenance of all vehicles of the corporation, attending to body building and repairing of lorries, and purchase and maintenance of school and office furniture. The Printing Press, General Stores, and General Workshop of Corporation function under the control of this department.
8 Electrical Superintending Engineer (Electrical) Installation and maintenance of all street lights, laying of cables, and maintenance of electric crematoriums
9 Solid Waste Management Superintending Engineer Removal of solid waste and executing night conservancy in all important roads and commercial areas of the city
10 Buildings Superintending Engineer Construction of school buildings, public conveniences, community halls, shopping complexes and hospitals
11 Storm Water Drain Superintending Engineer Construction, maintenance and desilting of storm water drains
12 Bridges Superintending Engineer Construction and maintenance of bridges, causeways and subways
13 Health Medical Officer Administration of dispensaries, public health, sanitation, prevention of food adulteration, issue of birth, death, and sanitation certificates
14 Family Welfare Medical Officer Administration of maternity and child welfare centers, family welfare and immunization programmes
15 Education Education Officer Administration of schools from elementary to higher secondary levels, community colleges and nutritious meals centers
16 Parks & Play Fields Director, Urban Forestry Wing
(assisted by two Park Superintendents and one Stadia Officer)
Maintenance of parks, play fields, and swimming pools

Elections edit

 
2022 Chennai Municipal Corporation Election
  Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam: 153 seats
  Indian National Congress: 13 seats
  Communist Party of India (Marxist): 4 seats
  Communist Party of India: 1 seat
  Amma Makkal Munnetra Kazhagam: 1 seat
  Viduthalai Chiruthaigal Katchi: 4 seats
  Indian Union Muslim League: 1 seat
  Marumalarchi Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam: 2 seats
  All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam: 15 seats
  Bharatiya Janata Party: 1 seat
  Independent : 5 seats

The seats of the Mayor, Deputy Mayor and the Greater Chennai Corporation Council have been vacant since 2016. As part of the 2022 Tamil Nadu urban civic body elections, the Greater Chennai Corporation went to polling on 19 February 2022, alongside 20 other municipal corporations of Tamil Nadu, to elect 200 councillors to represent the city's 200 wards; the councillors will choose one amongst themselves as the Mayor of Chennai, a historically significant, coveted office. The Government of Tamil Nadu had announced that the Mayor's seat has been reserved for a Scheduled Caste woman this time.[19] The election results were announced on 22 February 2022 by the Tamil Nadu State Election Commission. The Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) won 153 out of the total 200 wards in Chennai, with the other parties in its Secular Progressive Alliance winning 25 more seats—13 for Indian National Congress, four for Communist Party of India – Marxist (CPI-M), four for Viduthalai Chiruthaigal Katchi (VCK), two for Marumalarchi Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (MDMK), one each for Communist Party of India (CPI) and Indian Union Muslim League (IUML). The All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (AIADMK) won 15 seats. The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), the ruling party of the Union Government of India, won one seat. The Amma Makkal Munnettra Kazagam (AMMK) also won a seat. Aside parties, five independent candidates won in their respective wards. The councillors formally elected the Mayor and the Deputy Mayor on 4 March 2022.[20] Having secured an absolute majority, the DMK's mayoral candidate Priya Rajan became the 46th Mayor of Chennai, unopposed. She is the youngest mayor in Chennai's history (aged 28), and the first Dalit woman to hold the office.

Emblem edit

During the British period the Madras Corporation flag had the 'sea, boat, 3 lions and 2 fish'. The 3 lions represented the British and the sea, boat, and fish denoted the seashore of madras. After Independence, the need for changing the flag arose. M.P. Sivagnanam (Ma. Po. Si.) who was heading the education wing of the corporation suggested the Pandiya, Chola, Chera's symbol 'Fish, Tiger and Bow' (which he already had in his 'Tamil arasu kazhagam's flag). Rajaji agreed with his suggestion.[21]

Budget edit

As of 2020, the city government's budget is 3,815 crore (US$480 million), out of which 1,900 crore (US$240 million) was earmarked for capital expenditure, 120 crore (US$15 million) is to be spent on the smart city project and a massive 1,275 crore (US$160 million) on laying bus routes, construction of new bridges and other methods of improve the transport infrastructure of the city.[22]

Location and demography edit

Chennai Corporation area is located on the Coromandel Coast in the central eastern coastal region of the Deccan plateau and the northern end of the state of Tamil Nadu. The city stretches along the coast covering about 43 km of sandy beach and extending about 19 km inland, encompassing an area of 426 sq km. The estimated population is about 6.5 million.[7]

Functions edit

The corporation maintains roads, streetlights, and flyovers across the city[23][24][25] and also the city's cleanliness and hygiene levels.[26] It maintains 1,160 roads measuring a total of 370 km and storm water drain measuring 962 km and has 213,045 streetlights. Power consumption by the streetlights amounts to 50 megawatts a day, costing 14,00,000. The corporation has 260 parks and maintains 113 community halls for public use. The corporation registers about 400 births and 180 deaths every day.[7] The corporation also runs an abattoir.[27] There are 23,538 staffs working in the corporation.[7] In 2011–2012, 190 million was allotted by the Tamil Nadu government for the development of the city areas within corporation limits.[28] In 2014, the Tamil Nadu Generation and Distribution Corporation (Tangedco) planned to change its 11-kilo volt transformers with 1,784 ring main units (RMUs) that are compact and safe.[29]

Roads edit

The corporation maintains a total of 1,160 macadamised bus routes running to a total length of 353.94 km. The Total length of interior roads measures about 5,563.06 km. Total length of cement concrete roads maintained by the Corporation in the bus routes measures 3.68 km and the length of cement concrete interior roads measures 1,292.54 km.[8]

The newly expanded region of the corporation alone has 2,752 km of roads, along which there is a 682.4 km network of storm water drains.[30]

Street lamps in the city were introduced in 1785. Until the introduction of electric street lighting, the street lighting was done by oil lights. Till 1857, there were only 200 oil light lamps. By the year 1910, this was increased to 6,500. In 1910, electric street lighting was introduced. By 1924–1925, all the oil lights in the streets of the city were completely replaced by electric lights. The corporation also maintains 264 high-mast lights and 133 8-meter and 12-meter lamp posts with cluster lights at important junctions. The Corporation owns 22 hydraulic vehicles for attending maintenance work to streetlights.[31] In 2012, the Corporation started installing 60,000 streetlights in the newly included zones, in addition to replacing about 88,000 old streetlights in these zones.[32] Per the norm of the corporation, the minimum distance between two adjacent streetlights is 25 metre.[32]

As on 2012, the corporation maintains 262 bridges, road-overbridges and road-underbridges, including 65 high-level bridges, 31 box culverts, 81 slab culverts, 11 rail-overbridges, 14 rail-underbridges, 6 pedestrian subways, 6 causeways, 35 footbridges and 13 grade separators.[33]

In 2013, the corporation acquired a Road Measurement Data Acquisition System (ROMDAS) to check the quality of newly laid roads.[34]

Parks and open green spaces edit

 
Anna Park maintained by Anna University

Chennai has one of the lowest per capita green space in the country. As of 2012, It has only about 0.46 square metres per city dweller. According to the development rules, when plots measuring more than 10,000 square metres are developed, 10% of the area must be reserved as open space and gifted to the local bodies, and in plots measuring between 3,000 and 10,000 square metres, if gifting of 10% of the area as open space is not possible, cash equivalent can be paid. The money thus collected is utilized to develop the landscaping in the city.[35]

Since 1976, the Chennai Corporation has been collecting OSR charges and taking possession of land under the open space reservation rules. But so far it has not revealed what the total amount of land and cash collected. Data shows that since 2002, about 1.85 million square feet of land has been acquired.[36]

The corporation maintains 260 public parks, 154 traffic islands, and 103 centre medians on major roads. Since the formation of the corporation until 1947, the corporation had maintained 18 public play fields. As of 2012, the corporation maintains 228 play fields, 234 gymnasiums, 4 shuttles indoor stadium, 1 basketball indoor stadium, and 2 swimming pools. Of the 228 play fields, about 14 have been designated as star play ground with facilities such as courts for football, tennis, volleyball, ball badminton, and basketball. The gymnasiums are used by about 50 to 100 people every day. Indoor shuttle courts are located in Mandaiveli, R. R. Colony in Jafferkhanpet, Karpagam Avenue in Mylapore, and Nungambakkam. A basketball indoor stadium is located in Kilpauk Gardens. Swimming pools are located in Marina Beach and My Lady's Park. Skating rinks are located in Anna Nagar, Shenoy Nagar, Nungambakkam, Marina Beach, K. K. Nagar and T. Nagar.[37] The corporation also maintains beaches within the city.[38]

There are about 13,787 lights installed and maintained in the park and play fields by the corporation.[31]

Education edit

There are 322 schools run by the corporation, with a total student count of 130,000.[8] As per 2012–2013 corporation budget, 30 new English medium primary and middle schools will be started.[39] The civic body has also planned to construct 64 additional buildings on existing school campuses that require more classrooms. In addition, libraries and a career guidance centre would be set up in all corporation high and higher secondary schools.[39]

Health edit

The corporation maintains 75 dispensaries, 36 malaria clinics, 42 tuberculosis microscopic centres, and 1 centre each for communicable diseases, NGO-run malaria clinic, filaria clinic, and filaria lymphodema management clinic. The corporation maintains three slaughterhouses in Perambur, Villivakkam, and Saidapet, where an average of 1,500 sheep and 150 cattle are slaughtered every day.[8] As per 2012–2013 corporation budget, 11 new dental clinics will be set up in addition to the existing ones to ensure that every zone has a clinic.[39] A new hospital will be set up with a specialised leprosy centre and Mandambakkam to benefit the residents of South Chennai.[39] In 2007, it was reported that mosquitoes were the biggest menace in the city.[40] In 2012, the corporation announced that it was planning to breed sterile male mosquitoes to bring down the population of female mosquitoes.[41]

The corporation maintains electric furnace units at the burial grounds at Villivakkam, Nungambakkam, GKM colony, and Arumbakkam. It also maintains gassifier furnace units at Moolakothalam, Kannammapet, Besant Nagar Mylapore, Kasimedu, Vyasarpadi, Otteri, Thangal, Velangadu, Krishnampet, Saidapet, and Besant Nagar burial grounds.[31]

Solid waste management edit

 
Chennai Corporation mechanical sweeper in action at the Beach Road

Headed by a Superintendent Engineer, the corporation is responsible for removal of solid waste within city limits. Every day, 4,500 metric tons of garbage is collected and removed from the city. Night conservancy is being carried out in all important roads and commercial areas of the city. In addition, door-to-door collection of garbage is followed in all zones in the city.[42] The waste is transported by 966 conservancy vehicles.[7] The corporation maintains dumping grounds at Kodungaiyur and Perungudi for dumping solid waste.[7]

Chennai is hit by shortage of sanitary workers. To counter this, the corporation is to appoint 4,000 sanitary inspectors, junior engineers and assistant executive engineers in 2012.[43]

Garbage in most zones was previously handled by JBM Fanalca Environment Management, a private company, and by the Chennai Corporation in the other zones. Solid waste management in several parts of the city was subsequently handed over to Chennai Municipal Solid Waste Pvt. Ltd a special purpose vehicle run by the Hyderabad-based Ramky Group for a period of seven years starting January 2012;[44] elsewhere, Ramky Enviro Engineers Limited is described as a private company.[45] The company is reportedly running at a loss and the corporation was alleged to have paid only 32.5 million of the 65 million bill.[46] The company handles the three zones of Kodambakkam, Teynampet, and Adyar, also runs a toll-free telephone number to answer queries relating to waste management.[47] The company also performed street plays to spread awareness on keeping the city clean.[48] The Corporation later decided to take penal action against the private agency for not keeping up its end of the deal.[49] In September, a show cause notice for termination of the contract was served, which was further upheld by the Madras High Court.[50]

In other zones, the Corporation looks after the removal and processing of solid waste in the others,[51] with a superintendent engineer managing the channels. As of 2011, 8 transfer stations exist within the city for treating the waste.[52] Garbage is dumped in two dump-yards in the city—One in Kodungaiyur and another in Perungudi, with a major portion of the latter covering the Pallikaranai marshland.[53] In market areas, the conservancy work is done during the night.[54] Water supply and sewage treatment are handled by the Metropolitan Water Supply and Sewage Board, popularly referred to as Metro Water. Electricity is supplied by the Tamil Nadu Electricity Board.[55] Fire services are handled by the Tamil Nadu Fire and Rescue Service.[56] The city, along with the suburbs, has 33 operating fire stations.[57]

Police edit

The Greater Chennai Police department, a division of the Tamil Nadu Police, is the law enforcement agency in the city. The city police force is headed by a commissioner of police, and administrative control rests with the Tamil Nadu Home Ministry. The department consists of 36 subdivisions with a total of 121 police stations, of which 15 are ISO 9001:2000 certified.[58] The city's traffic is managed by the Chennai City Traffic Police (CCTP). The Metropolitan suburbs are policed by the Chennai Metropolitan Police, and outer district areas are policed by the Kanchipuram and Thiruvallur police departments.

Telecommunication edit

The city's telephone service is provided by three landline companies: Bharat Sanchar Nigam Limited (BSNL), Reliance Jio and Bharti Airtel.[59] There are four mobile phone companies: BSNL, Vodafone Idea, Bharti Airtel and Reliance Jio, which offers GSM services. Broadband Internet access is provided by BSNL, Hathway, Bharti Airtel,[60] You Broadband, Reliance Jio and ACT Broadband.

Waste management edit

The city generates 4,500 tonnes of garbage every day. The city has three dumpyards, one each at Perungudi, Kodungaiyur, and Pallikaranai. The corporation has planned to close these yards and create four new dumpyards at Malaipattu, Minjur, Vallur, and Kuthambakkam villages, ranging in size from 20 acres to 100 acres.[61][62] According to studies by the civic body, green waste and wood account for 39 percent of the city's garbage and food waste around 8 percent. The civic body also spends 4 billion (US$50 million) a year on solid waste management.[63] The corporation is planning to create a 200-acre park at the 269-acre Kodungaiyur dump yard and a 150-acre park at the 200-acre Perungudi dumpsite.[64]

Water edit

Historically, Chennai has relied on annual monsoon rains to replenish water reservoirs, as no major rivers flow through the area. Steadily growing in population, the city has faced water supply shortages, and its ground water levels have been depleted. Many residents buy water for drinking as well as other daily uses. An earlier Veeranam Lake project failed to solve the city's water problems, but the New Veeranam project, which became operational in September 2004, has greatly reduced dependency on distant sources.[65] In recent years, heavy and consistent monsoon rains and rainwater harvesting (RWH) by Chennai Metrowater at its Anna Nagar Rain Centre have significantly reduced water shortages. The Metrowater methods have become a model of RWH technology for other cities.[66] Moreover, newer projects like the Telugu Ganga project that bring water from water-surplus rivers like the Krishna River in Andhra Pradesh have eased water shortages. The city is constructing sea water desalination plants to further increase the water supply.[67][68]

The city's water supply and sewage treatment are managed by the Chennai MetroWater Supply and Sewage Board. Water is drawn from Red Hills Lake and Chembarambakkam Lake, the primary water reservoirs of the city,[69] and treated at water treatment plants located at Kilpauk, Puzhal, Chembarambakkam[70] and supplied to the city through 27 water distribution stations.[71] The city receives 530 million litres per day (MLD) of water from Krishna River through Telugu Ganga project, 180 MLD of water from the Veeranam lake project[70] and 100 MLD of water from the Minjur desalination plant, the country's largest sea water desalination plant.[72][73][74] However, Chennai is predicted to face a huge deficit of 713 MLD in 2026 as the demand is projected at 2,248 MLD and supply estimated at only 1,535 MLD.[75] There are 714 public toilets in the city managed by the city corporation,[76] and 2,000 more has been planned by the corporation.[77] The corporation also owns 52 community halls across the city.[78]

Awards edit

In December 2014, the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) adjudged the Chennai Corporation as the best among all the government departments in terms of e-governance.[79]

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Mariappan, Julie (30 January 2016). "Chennai Corporation to be Greater Chennai Corporation now". The Times of India. Chennai. Retrieved 30 January 2016.
  2. ^ Achutan, Kannal (23 September 2008). . The Hindu. Chennai. Archived from the original on 23 September 2008. Retrieved 1 September 2012.
  3. ^ "Daman Municipal Council".
  4. ^ http://www.chennaicorporation.gov.in/images/wards_commitee.pdf
  5. ^ "Chennai - the 2nd oldest Corporation in the world". The Hindu. Chennai.
  6. ^
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  8. ^ a b c d e f "Bus Route Roads". Corporation of Chennai. Retrieved 16 December 2012.
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  13. ^ "General statistics". Corporation of Chennai. Retrieved 4 August 2005.
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  15. ^ "Expanded Chennai Corporationto be divided into 3 regions". The Hindu. 25 November 2011. Retrieved 8 December 2012.
  16. ^ a b Ramakrishnan, Deepa H (20 September 2011). "Details of merged wards online soon". The Hindu. Retrieved 31 August 2012.
  17. ^ a b "சென்னை மாநகராட்சி எல்லைகள் விஸ்தரிப்பு- 200 வார்டுகளுடன் மெகா மாநகராட்சியானது". OneIndia.in. Retrieved 31 August 2012.
  18. ^ "about Corporation of Chennai—Departments". Corporation of Chennai. Retrieved 16 December 2012.
  19. ^ "Tamil Nadu civic polls: Who will be the Chennai Mayor?". Deccan Chronicle. Retrieved 23 February 2022.
  20. ^ "Tamil Nadu Urban Local Bodies Elections – 2022". Tamil Nadu State Election Commission. 22 February 2022. Retrieved 22 February 2022.
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  27. ^ "Civic body pressed on shifting abattoir". Chennai. The Hindu. 19 August 2012. Retrieved 7 December 2012.
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External links edit

  • Official website

greater, chennai, corporation, this, article, about, local, government, chennai, city, chennai, metropolitan, area, tambaram, city, tambaram, city, municipal, corporation, avadi, city, avadi, city, municipal, corporation, kanchipuram, city, kancheepuram, city,. This article is about Local Government of the Chennai City in Chennai Metropolitan Area For Tambaram City see Tambaram City Municipal Corporation For Avadi City see Avadi City Municipal Corporation For Kanchipuram City see Kancheepuram City Municipal Corporation Greater Chennai Corporation GCC 1 is a local government for the City of Chennai in the Chennai Metropolitan Area of Tamil Nadu India Inaugurated on 29 September 1688 under a royal charter issued by King James II of England on 30 December 1687 as the Corporation of Madras it is the oldest municipal body of the Commonwealth of Nations outside Great Britain 2 3 It is the largest municipal corporation in Tamil Nadu with an area of 426 km2 It is headed by a mayor who presides over 200 councillors each of whom represents one of the 200 wards of the city 4 It is the second oldest corporation in the world after the City of London 5 The city limits which had been expanded several times over the years is currently coterminous with the Chennai district It is one of the four municipal corporations located within the Chennai Metropolitan Area the other three being the Tambaram Corporation Avadi City Municipal Corporation and Kanchipuram Municipal Corporation Greater Chennai Corporation Perunakara Ceṉṉai ManakaraṭciEmblem of the Greater Chennai CorporationTypeTypeMunicipal corporation of the Chennai DistrictHistoryFounded29 September 1688 335 years ago 1688 09 29 LeadershipMayorPriya Rajan DMK since 4 March 2022Deputy MayorMahesh Kumar DMK since 4 March 2022CommissionerJ Radhakrishnan IASDistrict CollectorM Aruna IASStructureSeats200Political groupsGovernment 178 SPA 178 DMK 153 INC 13 CPI M 4 VCK 4 MDMK 2 CPI 1 IUML 1 Opposition 22 AIADMK 15 AMMK 1 BJP 1 IND 5 Meeting placeRipon Building Chennai Tamil Nadu IndiaWebsitechennaicorporation wbr gov wbr in Contents 1 History 2 Zone 2 1 Expansion 3 Administration 3 1 Administrative divisions 3 2 Departments 4 Elections 5 Emblem 6 Budget 7 Location and demography 8 Functions 8 1 Roads 8 2 Parks and open green spaces 8 3 Education 8 4 Health 8 5 Solid waste management 8 6 Police 8 7 Telecommunication 8 8 Waste management 8 9 Water 9 Awards 10 Gallery 11 See also 12 References 13 External linksHistory editThe Madras Corporation is the oldest municipal body of the Commonwealth of Nations outside the United Kingdom It was formed in 1688 to control the powers of the Governor of Madras Elihu Yale 6 The corporation was created by a Royal Charter issued on 30 December 1687 by King James II on the advice of the chairman of the East India Company Josiah Child on the model of Dutch Government in the East Indies 7 The charter constituted the existing town of Fort St George and all the territories belonging to the town not exceeding a distance of ten miles from the Fort into a Corporation The Parliamentary Act of 1792 conferred the new Corporation power to levy municipal taxes in the city The municipal administration also commenced from this act making provision for the administration of the city The Municipal Act continued to be amended constantly introducing major changes in the constitution and powers of the corporation from time to time 7 Prior to the establishments of the corporation the Governor of Madras or the company s agent managed the affairs of the Fort St George and its residents with the assistance of a headman an accountant and the head of watch and ward The Governor sat as Madras s Justice of the Peace Taxes were introduced by Governor Streynsham Master 1678 1681 Complications arising out of these impositions and the growing expenses of an expanding town led to Sir Josiah drawing up plans for a more formal body of civic administration The corporation was inaugurated on 29 September 1688 with power to decide on petty cases levy rates upon the inhabitants for building of schools a town hall and a jail when the new Mayor 12 Aldermen and 60 Burgesses took their oaths 7 The first members of the corporation were representatives from diverse ethnicities Nathaniel Higginson was the first Mayor and he appointed representatives from the English Scottish French Portuguese and Indian mercantile communities as Aldermen The post of the Mayor was held for one year at a time the Mayor being elected by the Aldermen whose term of office was for life By 1856 the duties of the Corporation became more clearly defined In 1919 the Aldermen were re styled as Councillors The title of Mayor had been replaced by President and P Theagaraya Chetty was nominated as president the first Indian to be so chosen However the office of Mayor was re created in 1933 when Kumararajah M A Muthiah Chettiar made the transition from last President to first new Mayor The mayoralty has remained thereafter By 1901 the corporation had grown to encompass an area of 68 sq km comprising 30 territorial divisions with a population of 540 000 8 In 1913 the Corporation moved to the newly constructed Ripon Building which was built on parts of the People s Park The building was named after Lord Ripon who as Viceroy of India from 1880 to 1884 had introduced local government reforms He is remembered in a statue in the Corporation precincts The first native Indian to both govern the Madras Presidency and later serve as Mayor of erstwhile Madras was the Honourable K Sriramulu Naidu who served during the 1930s and 1940s In 1978 the boundaries of the area administered by the corporation was increased to 174 sq km 8 The Madras Municipal Corporation Act 1919 as amended provides the basic statutory authority for the administration now 7 Zone editExpansion edit In October 2011 the expansion process was initiated before the elections to the corporation council in October In this 42 small local bodies including 9 municipalities 8 town panchayats and 25 village panchayats were merged with Chennai Corporation taking the area up by 140 to 426 km2 from the earlier 176 km2 8 9 Some areas have been arbitrarily left out to the discontent of the residents of those areas 10 The new expanded Corporation of Chennai has 200 wards an increase of 45 wards 11 Elections were held for the expanded corporation in October 2011 The erstwhile municipalities that became a part of expanded Chennai Corporation are Kathivakkam Tiruvottiyur Manali Madhavaram Ambattur Maduravoyal Valasaravakkam Alandur and Ullagaram Puzhuthivakkam The erstwhile town panchayats that became a part of expanded Chennai Corporation are Chinnasekkadu Puzhal Porur Nandambakkam Meenambakkam Perungudi Pallikaranai and Sholinganallur The erstwhile panchayat unions that became a part of expanded Chennai Corporation are Edayanchavadi Sadayankuppam Kadapakkam Theeyampakkam Mathur Vadaperumbakkam Surapet Kathirvedu Puthagaram Nolambur Karambakkam Nerkundram Ramapuram Mugalivakkam Manapakkam Kottivakkam Palavakkam Neelankarai Injambakkam Karapakkam Okkiam Thoraipakkam Madipakkam Jalladiampet Semmanchery and Uthandi Administration editSee also Chennai architecture and Subdivisions of India City officials as of March 2022 Mayor Priya Rajan Deputy Mayor M Mahesh Kumar Corporation Commissioner J Radhakrishnan Commissioner of Police Sandeep Rai Rathore From among themselves the councillors elect the mayor and a deputy mayor who preside over about 10 standing committees 12 The council normally meets once a month The executive wing is headed by the Commissioner In addition there are deputy commissioners various heads of departments and 15 zonal officers 7 The first native Indian to govern the Madras Presidency as well as serve later as the first Mayor post independence of erstwhile Madras was L Sriramulu Naidu Chennai the capital of Tamil Nadu state houses the state executive and legislative headquarters primarily in the Secretariat Buildings on the Fort St George campus but also in several other buildings in the city The Madras High Court whose jurisdiction extends across Tamil Nadu and Puducherry is the highest judicial authority in the state The district of Chennai has four parliamentary constituencies Chennai North Chennai Central Chennai South and Sriperumbudur which elects 29 members of the legislative assembly MLAs to the state legislature The metropolitan region of Chennai covers many suburbs that are part of Chengalpattu Kanchipuram and Thiruvallur districts The larger suburbs are governed by town municipalities and the smaller ones are governed by town councils called panchayats While the city covers an area of 174 km2 67 mi2 13 the metropolitan area is spread over 1 189 km2 458 mi2 14 The Chennai Metropolitan Development Authority CMDA has drafted a Second Master Plan that aims to develop satellite townships around the city Contiguous satellite towns include Mahabalipuram to the south Chengalpattu and Maraimalai Nagar to the southwest and Kanchipuram Sriperumpudur Tiruvallur and Arakkonam to the west Administrative divisions edit nbsp 15 zones of the Chennai Corporation after expansion Main article List of Chennai Corporation wards The city is classified into three regions North Chennai Central Chennai and South Chennai 15 It is further divided into 15 zones consisting of 200 wards 16 The newly annexed areas were divided into 93 wards and the remaining 107 wards were created out of the original 155 within the old city limits 17 As of September 2011 update the new wards are yet to be named 16 Out of the 200 wards 26 were reserved for scheduled castes and scheduled tribes and 58 were reserved for women 17 The 23 Zones are North Chennai ThiruvottiyurMadhavaramKolathurPeramburDr Radhakrishnan NagarRoyapuramHarbourThiru Vi Ka NagarCentral Chennai VillivakkamAmbatturAnna NagarEgmoreChepakkam ThiruvallikeniThousand LightsThiyagayaraya NagarVirugambakkamSouth Chennai MaduravoyalAlandurSaidapettaiThirumayilaiVelacherySholinganallur ISholinganallur II Departments edit The corporation has the following departments 18 S No Department Headed by Responsibility 1 Council Council Secretary Functions as the Secretariat of the council the Mayor and the various standing committees Aids the Mayor in the discharge of his duties as well as the Council and Standing Committees 2 General Administration Assistant Commissioner In charge of the personnel and administrative matters for the corporation as a whole 3 Financial Management Financial Adviser Preparation of Corporation budget receiving loans and grants from the government and overseeing and controlling the expenses of the Corporation 4 Land amp Estate District Revenue Officer Leasing out Corporation lands and buildings and renting out shopping complexes 5 Revenue Revenue Officer Collection of taxes such as property professional advertisement parking fees and other taxes At the head office change of name of ownership of properties revision petitions against fixation of tax review of progress in collection of taxes and scrutiny and approval of assessment proposals 6 Works City Engineer Town planning sanction of plan and permits up to first floor for industrial and residential buildings and maintenance of private streets and central asphalt plant and central yard 7 Mechanical Engineering Superintending Engineer Mechanical Purchase and maintenance of all vehicles of the corporation attending to body building and repairing of lorries and purchase and maintenance of school and office furniture The Printing Press General Stores and General Workshop of Corporation function under the control of this department 8 Electrical Superintending Engineer Electrical Installation and maintenance of all street lights laying of cables and maintenance of electric crematoriums 9 Solid Waste Management Superintending Engineer Removal of solid waste and executing night conservancy in all important roads and commercial areas of the city 10 Buildings Superintending Engineer Construction of school buildings public conveniences community halls shopping complexes and hospitals 11 Storm Water Drain Superintending Engineer Construction maintenance and desilting of storm water drains 12 Bridges Superintending Engineer Construction and maintenance of bridges causeways and subways 13 Health Medical Officer Administration of dispensaries public health sanitation prevention of food adulteration issue of birth death and sanitation certificates 14 Family Welfare Medical Officer Administration of maternity and child welfare centers family welfare and immunization programmes 15 Education Education Officer Administration of schools from elementary to higher secondary levels community colleges and nutritious meals centers 16 Parks amp Play Fields Director Urban Forestry Wing assisted by two Park Superintendents and one Stadia Officer Maintenance of parks play fields and swimming poolsElections edit nbsp 2022 Chennai Municipal Corporation Election Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam 153 seats Indian National Congress 13 seats Communist Party of India Marxist 4 seats Communist Party of India 1 seat Amma Makkal Munnetra Kazhagam 1 seat Viduthalai Chiruthaigal Katchi 4 seats Indian Union Muslim League 1 seat Marumalarchi Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam 2 seats All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam 15 seats Bharatiya Janata Party 1 seat Independent 5 seats The seats of the Mayor Deputy Mayor and the Greater Chennai Corporation Council have been vacant since 2016 As part of the 2022 Tamil Nadu urban civic body elections the Greater Chennai Corporation went to polling on 19 February 2022 alongside 20 other municipal corporations of Tamil Nadu to elect 200 councillors to represent the city s 200 wards the councillors will choose one amongst themselves as the Mayor of Chennai a historically significant coveted office The Government of Tamil Nadu had announced that the Mayor s seat has been reserved for a Scheduled Caste woman this time 19 The election results were announced on 22 February 2022 by the Tamil Nadu State Election Commission The Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam DMK won 153 out of the total 200 wards in Chennai with the other parties in its Secular Progressive Alliance winning 25 more seats 13 for Indian National Congress four for Communist Party of India Marxist CPI M four for Viduthalai Chiruthaigal Katchi VCK two for Marumalarchi Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam MDMK one each for Communist Party of India CPI and Indian Union Muslim League IUML The All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam AIADMK won 15 seats The Bharatiya Janata Party BJP the ruling party of the Union Government of India won one seat The Amma Makkal Munnettra Kazagam AMMK also won a seat Aside parties five independent candidates won in their respective wards The councillors formally elected the Mayor and the Deputy Mayor on 4 March 2022 20 Having secured an absolute majority the DMK s mayoral candidate Priya Rajan became the 46th Mayor of Chennai unopposed She is the youngest mayor in Chennai s history aged 28 and the first Dalit woman to hold the office Emblem editDuring the British period the Madras Corporation flag had the sea boat 3 lions and 2 fish The 3 lions represented the British and the sea boat and fish denoted the seashore of madras After Independence the need for changing the flag arose M P Sivagnanam Ma Po Si who was heading the education wing of the corporation suggested the Pandiya Chola Chera s symbol Fish Tiger and Bow which he already had in his Tamil arasu kazhagam s flag Rajaji agreed with his suggestion 21 Budget editAs of 2020 the city government s budget is 3 815 crore US 480 million out of which 1 900 crore US 240 million was earmarked for capital expenditure 120 crore US 15 million is to be spent on the smart city project and a massive 1 275 crore US 160 million on laying bus routes construction of new bridges and other methods of improve the transport infrastructure of the city 22 Location and demography editChennai Corporation area is located on the Coromandel Coast in the central eastern coastal region of the Deccan plateau and the northern end of the state of Tamil Nadu The city stretches along the coast covering about 43 km of sandy beach and extending about 19 km inland encompassing an area of 426 sq km The estimated population is about 6 5 million 7 Functions editThe corporation maintains roads streetlights and flyovers across the city 23 24 25 and also the city s cleanliness and hygiene levels 26 It maintains 1 160 roads measuring a total of 370 km and storm water drain measuring 962 km and has 213 045 streetlights Power consumption by the streetlights amounts to 50 megawatts a day costing 14 00 000 The corporation has 260 parks and maintains 113 community halls for public use The corporation registers about 400 births and 180 deaths every day 7 The corporation also runs an abattoir 27 There are 23 538 staffs working in the corporation 7 In 2011 2012 190 million was allotted by the Tamil Nadu government for the development of the city areas within corporation limits 28 In 2014 the Tamil Nadu Generation and Distribution Corporation Tangedco planned to change its 11 kilo volt transformers with 1 784 ring main units RMUs that are compact and safe 29 Roads edit The corporation maintains a total of 1 160 macadamised bus routes running to a total length of 353 94 km The Total length of interior roads measures about 5 563 06 km Total length of cement concrete roads maintained by the Corporation in the bus routes measures 3 68 km and the length of cement concrete interior roads measures 1 292 54 km 8 The newly expanded region of the corporation alone has 2 752 km of roads along which there is a 682 4 km network of storm water drains 30 Street lamps in the city were introduced in 1785 Until the introduction of electric street lighting the street lighting was done by oil lights Till 1857 there were only 200 oil light lamps By the year 1910 this was increased to 6 500 In 1910 electric street lighting was introduced By 1924 1925 all the oil lights in the streets of the city were completely replaced by electric lights The corporation also maintains 264 high mast lights and 133 8 meter and 12 meter lamp posts with cluster lights at important junctions The Corporation owns 22 hydraulic vehicles for attending maintenance work to streetlights 31 In 2012 the Corporation started installing 60 000 streetlights in the newly included zones in addition to replacing about 88 000 old streetlights in these zones 32 Per the norm of the corporation the minimum distance between two adjacent streetlights is 25 metre 32 As on 2012 the corporation maintains 262 bridges road overbridges and road underbridges including 65 high level bridges 31 box culverts 81 slab culverts 11 rail overbridges 14 rail underbridges 6 pedestrian subways 6 causeways 35 footbridges and 13 grade separators 33 In 2013 the corporation acquired a Road Measurement Data Acquisition System ROMDAS to check the quality of newly laid roads 34 Parks and open green spaces edit See also Parks in Chennai nbsp Anna Park maintained by Anna University Chennai has one of the lowest per capita green space in the country As of 2012 It has only about 0 46 square metres per city dweller According to the development rules when plots measuring more than 10 000 square metres are developed 10 of the area must be reserved as open space and gifted to the local bodies and in plots measuring between 3 000 and 10 000 square metres if gifting of 10 of the area as open space is not possible cash equivalent can be paid The money thus collected is utilized to develop the landscaping in the city 35 Since 1976 the Chennai Corporation has been collecting OSR charges and taking possession of land under the open space reservation rules But so far it has not revealed what the total amount of land and cash collected Data shows that since 2002 about 1 85 million square feet of land has been acquired 36 The corporation maintains 260 public parks 154 traffic islands and 103 centre medians on major roads Since the formation of the corporation until 1947 the corporation had maintained 18 public play fields As of 2012 the corporation maintains 228 play fields 234 gymnasiums 4 shuttles indoor stadium 1 basketball indoor stadium and 2 swimming pools Of the 228 play fields about 14 have been designated as star play ground with facilities such as courts for football tennis volleyball ball badminton and basketball The gymnasiums are used by about 50 to 100 people every day Indoor shuttle courts are located in Mandaiveli R R Colony in Jafferkhanpet Karpagam Avenue in Mylapore and Nungambakkam A basketball indoor stadium is located in Kilpauk Gardens Swimming pools are located in Marina Beach and My Lady s Park Skating rinks are located in Anna Nagar Shenoy Nagar Nungambakkam Marina Beach K K Nagar and T Nagar 37 The corporation also maintains beaches within the city 38 There are about 13 787 lights installed and maintained in the park and play fields by the corporation 31 Education edit There are 322 schools run by the corporation with a total student count of 130 000 8 As per 2012 2013 corporation budget 30 new English medium primary and middle schools will be started 39 The civic body has also planned to construct 64 additional buildings on existing school campuses that require more classrooms In addition libraries and a career guidance centre would be set up in all corporation high and higher secondary schools 39 Health edit The corporation maintains 75 dispensaries 36 malaria clinics 42 tuberculosis microscopic centres and 1 centre each for communicable diseases NGO run malaria clinic filaria clinic and filaria lymphodema management clinic The corporation maintains three slaughterhouses in Perambur Villivakkam and Saidapet where an average of 1 500 sheep and 150 cattle are slaughtered every day 8 As per 2012 2013 corporation budget 11 new dental clinics will be set up in addition to the existing ones to ensure that every zone has a clinic 39 A new hospital will be set up with a specialised leprosy centre and Mandambakkam to benefit the residents of South Chennai 39 In 2007 it was reported that mosquitoes were the biggest menace in the city 40 In 2012 the corporation announced that it was planning to breed sterile male mosquitoes to bring down the population of female mosquitoes 41 The corporation maintains electric furnace units at the burial grounds at Villivakkam Nungambakkam GKM colony and Arumbakkam It also maintains gassifier furnace units at Moolakothalam Kannammapet Besant Nagar Mylapore Kasimedu Vyasarpadi Otteri Thangal Velangadu Krishnampet Saidapet and Besant Nagar burial grounds 31 Solid waste management edit nbsp Chennai Corporation mechanical sweeper in action at the Beach Road Headed by a Superintendent Engineer the corporation is responsible for removal of solid waste within city limits Every day 4 500 metric tons of garbage is collected and removed from the city Night conservancy is being carried out in all important roads and commercial areas of the city In addition door to door collection of garbage is followed in all zones in the city 42 The waste is transported by 966 conservancy vehicles 7 The corporation maintains dumping grounds at Kodungaiyur and Perungudi for dumping solid waste 7 Chennai is hit by shortage of sanitary workers To counter this the corporation is to appoint 4 000 sanitary inspectors junior engineers and assistant executive engineers in 2012 43 Garbage in most zones was previously handled by JBM Fanalca Environment Management a private company and by the Chennai Corporation in the other zones Solid waste management in several parts of the city was subsequently handed over to Chennai Municipal Solid Waste Pvt Ltd a special purpose vehicle run by the Hyderabad based Ramky Group for a period of seven years starting January 2012 44 elsewhere Ramky Enviro Engineers Limited is described as a private company 45 The company is reportedly running at a loss and the corporation was alleged to have paid only 32 5 million of the 65 million bill 46 The company handles the three zones of Kodambakkam Teynampet and Adyar also runs a toll free telephone number to answer queries relating to waste management 47 The company also performed street plays to spread awareness on keeping the city clean 48 The Corporation later decided to take penal action against the private agency for not keeping up its end of the deal 49 In September a show cause notice for termination of the contract was served which was further upheld by the Madras High Court 50 In other zones the Corporation looks after the removal and processing of solid waste in the others 51 with a superintendent engineer managing the channels As of 2011 8 transfer stations exist within the city for treating the waste 52 Garbage is dumped in two dump yards in the city One in Kodungaiyur and another in Perungudi with a major portion of the latter covering the Pallikaranai marshland 53 In market areas the conservancy work is done during the night 54 Water supply and sewage treatment are handled by the Metropolitan Water Supply and Sewage Board popularly referred to as Metro Water Electricity is supplied by the Tamil Nadu Electricity Board 55 Fire services are handled by the Tamil Nadu Fire and Rescue Service 56 The city along with the suburbs has 33 operating fire stations 57 Police edit The Greater Chennai Police department a division of the Tamil Nadu Police is the law enforcement agency in the city The city police force is headed by a commissioner of police and administrative control rests with the Tamil Nadu Home Ministry The department consists of 36 subdivisions with a total of 121 police stations of which 15 are ISO 9001 2000 certified 58 The city s traffic is managed by the Chennai City Traffic Police CCTP The Metropolitan suburbs are policed by the Chennai Metropolitan Police and outer district areas are policed by the Kanchipuram and Thiruvallur police departments Telecommunication edit The city s telephone service is provided by three landline companies Bharat Sanchar Nigam Limited BSNL Reliance Jio and Bharti Airtel 59 There are four mobile phone companies BSNL Vodafone Idea Bharti Airtel and Reliance Jio which offers GSM services Broadband Internet access is provided by BSNL Hathway Bharti Airtel 60 You Broadband Reliance Jio and ACT Broadband Waste management edit The city generates 4 500 tonnes of garbage every day The city has three dumpyards one each at Perungudi Kodungaiyur and Pallikaranai The corporation has planned to close these yards and create four new dumpyards at Malaipattu Minjur Vallur and Kuthambakkam villages ranging in size from 20 acres to 100 acres 61 62 According to studies by the civic body green waste and wood account for 39 percent of the city s garbage and food waste around 8 percent The civic body also spends 4 billion US 50 million a year on solid waste management 63 The corporation is planning to create a 200 acre park at the 269 acre Kodungaiyur dump yard and a 150 acre park at the 200 acre Perungudi dumpsite 64 Water edit Historically Chennai has relied on annual monsoon rains to replenish water reservoirs as no major rivers flow through the area Steadily growing in population the city has faced water supply shortages and its ground water levels have been depleted Many residents buy water for drinking as well as other daily uses An earlier Veeranam Lake project failed to solve the city s water problems but the New Veeranam project which became operational in September 2004 has greatly reduced dependency on distant sources 65 In recent years heavy and consistent monsoon rains and rainwater harvesting RWH by Chennai Metrowater at its Anna Nagar Rain Centre have significantly reduced water shortages The Metrowater methods have become a model of RWH technology for other cities 66 Moreover newer projects like the Telugu Ganga project that bring water from water surplus rivers like the Krishna River in Andhra Pradesh have eased water shortages The city is constructing sea water desalination plants to further increase the water supply 67 68 The city s water supply and sewage treatment are managed by the Chennai MetroWater Supply and Sewage Board Water is drawn from Red Hills Lake and Chembarambakkam Lake the primary water reservoirs of the city 69 and treated at water treatment plants located at Kilpauk Puzhal Chembarambakkam 70 and supplied to the city through 27 water distribution stations 71 The city receives 530 million litres per day MLD of water from Krishna River through Telugu Ganga project 180 MLD of water from the Veeranam lake project 70 and 100 MLD of water from the Minjur desalination plant the country s largest sea water desalination plant 72 73 74 However Chennai is predicted to face a huge deficit of 713 MLD in 2026 as the demand is projected at 2 248 MLD and supply estimated at only 1 535 MLD 75 There are 714 public toilets in the city managed by the city corporation 76 and 2 000 more has been planned by the corporation 77 The corporation also owns 52 community halls across the city 78 Awards editIn December 2014 the Confederation of Indian Industry CII adjudged the Chennai Corporation as the best among all the government departments in terms of e governance 79 Gallery edit nbsp Entrance view nbsp Alternate view nbsp Ripon Building under the Dark Clouds nbsp Complete front facade of the building nbsp Ripon Building at 1990 nbsp Ripon Building panoramic viewSee also edit nbsp India portal Chennai List of Chennai Corporation wards List of mayors of Chennai Tambaram CorporationReferences edit Mariappan Julie 30 January 2016 Chennai Corporation to be Greater Chennai Corporation now The Times of India Chennai Retrieved 30 January 2016 Achutan Kannal 23 September 2008 Chennai Corporation to celebrate 320 years The Hindu Chennai Archived from the original on 23 September 2008 Retrieved 1 September 2012 Daman Municipal Council http www chennaicorporation gov in images wards commitee pdf Chennai the 2nd oldest Corporation in the world The Hindu Chennai The First Corporation The Hindu 2 April 2003 a b c d e f g h i j About Corporation of Chennai Corporation of Chennai Retrieved 9 December 2012 a b c d e f Bus Route Roads Corporation of Chennai Retrieved 16 December 2012 Bill to expand Chennai passed by TN assembly The Times of India 14 January 2011 Archived from the original on 17 June 2013 Retrieved 28 October 2011 Southern suburb angry at being left out of bigger city The Times of India 10 September 2011 Archived from the original on 28 July 2012 Retrieved 28 October 2011 Cities Chennai Chennai Corporation set to have 45 more wards The Hindu Chennai India 9 September 2011 Retrieved 28 October 2011 Chennai Corporation General Statistics Chennai Corporation Archived from the original on 9 September 2007 Retrieved 4 September 2007 General statistics Corporation of Chennai Retrieved 4 August 2005 Chennai Metropolitan Area Profile Chennai Metropolitan Development Authority Archived from the original on 27 September 2007 Retrieved 15 September 2007 Expanded Chennai Corporationto be divided into 3 regions The Hindu 25 November 2011 Retrieved 8 December 2012 a b Ramakrishnan Deepa H 20 September 2011 Details of merged wards online soon The Hindu Retrieved 31 August 2012 a b ச ன ன ம நகர ட ச எல ல கள வ ஸ தர ப ப 200 வ ர ட கள டன ம க ம நகர ட ச ய னத OneIndia in Retrieved 31 August 2012 about Corporation of Chennai Departments Corporation of Chennai Retrieved 16 December 2012 Tamil Nadu civic polls Who will be the Chennai Mayor Deccan Chronicle Retrieved 23 February 2022 Tamil Nadu Urban Local Bodies Elections 2022 Tamil Nadu State Election Commission 22 February 2022 Retrieved 22 February 2022 ப ஸ கர ம ப ச ம தவ தம ழக வரல ற ற ல ம த த ர பத த த ம ப ச இந த தம ழ த ச Corporation passes 2020 21 budget DTNext in Archived from the original on 4 August 2020 ALOYSIUS XAVIER LOPEZ 24 March 2012 Chennai all set to turn brighter Chennai The Hindu Retrieved 7 December 2012 ALOYSIUS XAVIER LOPEZ 21 September 2012 Where will the city s new flyovers be Chennai The Hindu Retrieved 7 December 2012 ALOYSIUS XAVIER LOPEZ 20 April 2012 Space beneath 13 flyovers in city all set for makeover Chennai The Hindu Retrieved 7 December 2012 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Corporation to intensify mass cleaning programme Chennai The Hindu 24 July 2012 Retrieved 7 December 2012 Civic body pressed on shifting abattoir Chennai The Hindu 19 August 2012 Retrieved 7 December 2012 ச ன ன ம நகர ட ச வளர ச ச ப பண கள க க தம ழக அரச ஒர ஆண ட ல ர 1 900 க ட ந த ஒத க க ட ச ய த ள ளத ம யர ச த த ர ச ம தகவல Daily Thanthi in Tamil Chennai 1 December 2012 Retrieved 20 December 2012 Srikanth R 21 February 2014 Chennai s transformers to become compact safe The Hindu Chennai Retrieved 22 February 2014 Chennai s extended areas may get temporary storm water drains The Times of India Chennai 18 December 2012 Archived from the original on 26 January 2013 Retrieved 19 December 2012 a b c Electrical History Corporation of Chennai Retrieved 29 December 2012 a b Added zones to get 60 000 LED streetlights The Hindu Chennai 20 December 2012 Retrieved 24 December 2012 Departments Bridges Corporation of Chennai Retrieved 29 December 2012 Ramkumar Pratiksha 24 October 2013 Chennai Corporation acquires machine to check quality of newly laid roads Times of India Chennai Retrieved 24 October 2013 A Srivathsan 26 March 2012 Where is our patch of green Mr Mayor The Hindu Retrieved 7 December 2012 List of OSR Sites Handed Over to Chennai Corporation PDF Parks Corporation of Chennai Retrieved 16 December 2012 Chennai Corpn to beautify beaches The Times of India Chennai 19 December 2012 Archived from the original on 28 January 2013 Retrieved 19 December 2012 a b c d Pratiksha Ramkumar 12 May 2012 Chennai corporation budget focuses on education health The Times of India Chennai Archived from the original on 26 January 2013 Retrieved 16 December 2012 Mosquitoes not water Chennai s Problem No 1 The Hindu Chennai 6 March 2007 Archived from the original on 8 March 2007 Retrieved 18 December 2012 Lopez Aloysius Xavier 18 December 2012 Chennai Corporation s new plan grow mosquitoes to kill mosquitoes Chennai The Hindu Retrieved 18 December 2012 Welcome to Greater Chennai Corporation www chennaicorporation gov in Ram Arun 20 July 2012 Chennai Corporation to recruit 4 000 inspectors and engineers The Times of India Archived from the original on 26 January 2013 Retrieved 9 December 2012 Varadarajan Nivedita 16 June 2012 Waste disposal goes haywire Chennai The Hindu Retrieved 18 December 2012 New firm to begin conservancy work next week The Hindu 4 January 2012 Retrieved 6 February 2012 Ramky staff resume work after flash strike Chennai The Hindu 25 October 2012 Retrieved 18 December 2012 Lalithasai 23 May 2012 Will the new broom sweep clean Chennai The Hindu Retrieved 18 December 2012 Clean city campaign to reach out to residents Chennai The Hindu 20 January 2012 Retrieved 18 December 2012 Aloysius Xavier Lopez 7 June 2012 Finding a way out of the mess Chennai The Hindu Retrieved 18 December 2012 HC dismisses Ramky s plea against termination notice Chennai The Hindu 18 December 2012 Retrieved 18 December 2012 New garbage collection street cleaning mechanism The Hindu 27 January 2012 Retrieved 29 February 2012 Solid Waste Management Corporation of Chennai Retrieved 29 February 2012 Madhavan D 7 April 2012 Cluster based solid waste mgmt may ease pressure on dump yards The Times of India Archived from the original on 14 May 2013 Ramakrishnan Deepa H 25 January 2012 SMS fillip for garbage collection The Hindu Retrieved 29 February 2012 Emergency and Utility Services Contact Details at Chennai Govt of Tamil Nadu Archived from the original on 30 September 2007 Retrieved 7 September 2007 Contact us Tamil Nadu Fire and Rescue Service Archived from the original on 23 April 2012 Retrieved 1 September 2012 List of fire stations Tamil Nadu Fire and Rescue Service Archived from the original on 24 April 2012 Retrieved 1 September 2012 Chennai Police ISO 9001 2000 Govt of Tamil Nadu Archived from the original on 18 December 2005 Retrieved 9 August 2005 Touchtel arrives in Coimbatore The Hindu Business Line Archived from the original on 27 September 2007 Retrieved 7 September 2007 Chennai Airtel Broadband Airtel Broadband Chennai Ph 9840022123 Airtel V Fiber Connection City to finally be free of garbage dumps The Times of India Chennai 30 October 2012 Archived from the original on 14 May 2013 Retrieved 30 October 2012 Corpn plans to move dump yards residents breathe easy The Times of India Chennai The Times Group 30 October 2012 Archived from the original on 4 February 2013 Retrieved 30 October 2012 Philip Christin Mathew 3 November 2012 Don t dump waste on others Experts The Times of India Chennai Archived from the original on 13 May 2013 Retrieved 3 November 2012 Ramkumar Pratiksha 3 November 2012 Garbage to make way for green spaces The Times of India Chennai Archived from the original on 6 November 2012 Retrieved 3 November 2012 Chennai Water Supply Management of water supply during acute water scarcity in 2003 amp 2004 Chennai Metropolitan Water Supply and Sewage Board CMWSSB Archived from the original on 12 August 2007 Retrieved 16 March 2007 Bangalore team visits RWH structures in city The Hindu 3 August 2007 Archived from the original on 1 October 2007 Retrieved 11 August 2007 IVRCL to set up desalination plant near Chennai The Hindu 12 August 2005 Archived from the original on 11 October 2007 Retrieved 18 September 2007 Preliminary work on desalination plant to be completed by December end The Hindu 4 September 2007 Archived from the original on 12 October 2007 Retrieved 18 September 2007 Second Master Plan PDF Chennai Metropolitan Development Authority pp 157 159 a b Water Supply System Chennai Metro Water Archived from the original on 15 October 2013 Retrieved 16 September 2012 Second Master Plan PDF Chennai Metropolitan Development Authority p 163 India s biggest desalination plant opens in Chennai The Hindustan Times 1 August 2010 Archived from the original on 3 August 2010 Retrieved 11 June 2011 IVRCL to set up desalination plant near Chennai The Hindu 12 August 2005 Archived from the original on 13 February 2009 Retrieved 18 September 2007 Radhakrishnan R K 4 September 2007 Preliminary work on desalination plant to be completed by December end The Hindu Archived from the original on 12 October 2007 Retrieved 18 September 2007 Chennai worst in saving water Deccan Chronicle 6 May 2011 Archived from the original on 11 October 2012 Retrieved 11 June 2011 No response from firms to build toilets The Times of India 24 September 2012 Archived from the original on 29 April 2013 Retrieved 29 September 2012 From 24 Feb use public toilets for free says mayor The Times of India Chennai 31 October 2012 Archived from the original on 29 April 2013 Retrieved 2 November 2012 Residents to soon have free use of community halls The Hindu Chennai 31 October 2012 Retrieved 2 November 2012 Chandrababu Divya 17 December 2014 Chennai Corporation gets e governance award The Times of India Chennai The Times Group Retrieved 25 December 2014 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Greater Chennai Corporation Official website The Chennai City Municipal Corporation Act 1919 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Greater Chennai Corporation amp oldid 1220089080, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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