Key Points

The Rajasthan government has decided to merge Jaipur’s two municipal corporations into a single entity before the 2025 elections. The move will reduce the number of wards from 250 to 150 while expanding jurisdiction to include 78 villages. Officials cite the Rajasthan Municipality Act as the legal basis for the restructuring, with public feedback open until April 17. This decision reverses the 2019 split by the previous Congress government, streamlining governance ahead of polls.

Key Points: Rajasthan Merges Jaipur Civic Bodies Ahead of 2025 Polls

  • Jaipur civic bodies merged under Rajasthan Municipality Act
  • Wards to shrink from 250 to 150 post-reorganization
  • 78 villages added to Jaipur Municipal Corporation
  • Public can submit objections until April 17
2 min read

Rajasthan govt to merge two civic bodies in Jaipur ahead of 2025 polls

Rajasthan govt unifies Jaipur’s two municipal corporations into one, reducing wards from 250 to 150 before 2025 elections.

"The state government has merged the Greater Municipal Corporation and Municipal Corporation Heritage – Indrajit Singh, Director of Local Bodies"

Jaipur, March 29

The Rajasthan government has decided to merge the Jaipur Greater Municipal Corporation and Jaipur Municipal Corporation Heritage ahead of the civic body elections in the state, government officials said on Friday.

The Department of Autonomous Governance issued an official order on Thursday, confirming that in the future, there will be only one unified Jaipur Municipal Corporation.

Indrajit Singh, Director of the Department of Autonomous Governance, said that Jaipur was originally divided into Heritage and Greater Municipal Corporations in 2019.

However, the merger will take effect only after the completion of the current term of both the corporations.

"Using the powers of Sections 3, 5, 6 and 10 of the Rajasthan Municipality Act, 2009, the state government has merged the Greater Municipal Corporation and Municipal Corporation Heritage," Indrajit Singh, Director, Directorate of Local Bodies, added.

Jaipur Municipal Corporation was initially established in 1994, evolving from the Jaipur Municipal Council.

Over the years, the number of wards increased due to population growth, but the corporation's boundaries remained unchanged.

In 1994, there were 70 wards created while in 2004, they were expanded to 77 wards, and in 2014, they were further increased to 91 wards.

With the merger, the existing 250 wards will be reorganised into 150 new wards.

A proposal has been prepared to define these new boundaries, and the people can submit their objections and suggestions until April 17.

Previously, in 2019, the previous Congress government expanded the number of wards from 91 to 250.

Now, the current BJP-led state government plans to combine three to four wards into one, increasing the population per ward from 9,000-13,000 to 20,000-30,000.

Additionally, 78 villages will now come under the Jaipur Municipal Corporation's jurisdiction, officials said.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rahul K.
Finally some sensible decision! Having two corporations was creating so much confusion and duplication of work. Hope this leads to better civic services 🙏
P
Priya M.
Interesting timing with elections coming up next year... 🤔 Wonder if this is more about administrative efficiency or political strategy?
S
Sanjay T.
As someone from one of the newly included villages, I'm cautiously optimistic. Hope we get proper water supply and sanitation facilities now!
A
Anjali R.
The ward reorganization seems rushed. Reducing from 250 to 150 means each councilor will have to serve more people. Quality of representation might suffer.
V
Vikram P.
Good move! Less bureaucracy means faster decision making. Now please fix our roads and garbage collection system 😅
N
Neha S.
I remember when it was just one corporation before 2019. The split never made sense to me. Welcome back to unified Jaipur! 💛

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