Administration in Bihar explained

Government Name:Administration in Bihar
Division Type:Seat of Government
Division:Patna
Leader Type:Governor
Leader Title:Rajendra Arlekar
Leader Type2:Chief Minister
Leader Title2:Nitish Kumar
Legislature Label:Assembly
Speaker Label:Speaker
Speaker:Nand Kishore Yadav
Members In Assembly Label:Members in Assembly
Members In Assembly:243
Legislative Council Label:Council
Legislative Council:Bihar Legislative Council
Chairman Label:Chairman
Chairman:Devesh Chandra Thakur
Members In Council Label:Members in Council
Members In Council:75
Branch4:Judiciary
Court Name:High Court
Court:Patna High Court
Chief Justice Label:Chief Justice
Chief Justice:Justice K. Vinod Chandran

Bihar is a state situated in Eastern India. It is surrounded by West Bengal to the east, Uttar Pradesh to the west, Jharkhand to the south and Nepal to the north.

History

Magadha, Anga and Vajjika League of Mithila, c.

 600 BCE.

Bengal Presidency

Before 1905, Bihar was a part of British East India Company's Bengal Presidency. In 1905 the Bengal Presidency was divided and created two new provinces: East Bengal and West Bengal. Until then Bihar was part of West Bengal. Again West Bengal and East Bengal reunited in 1911 but the people of Bihar and Orrisa demanded a separate province based on language rather than religion. In 1912 Bihar and Orissa Province was created separating from Bengal Presidency. In 1936, Bihar and Orrisa Province divided into two new provinces: Bihar Province and Orissa Province.

Bihar and Orissa Province

Following Divisions were included in Bihar and Orissa Province when it separated from Bengal Presidency in 1912:

On 1 April 1936 Bihar and Orissa Province was divided into two new provinces: Bihar Province and Orissa Province

Bihar Province

In 1936, Bihar became a separate province including part of Jharkhand.

After the independence of India in 1951, Bihar including Jharkhand had 18 divisions, and had 55 districts in 1991.

Bihar

In 2000, Bihar again divided into two states: the current Bihar and Jharkhand. In 2001 Bihar had a total of 38 districts.

Administrative structure

Structure

9
Districts38
Subdivisions101
Cities and towns261
Blocks534
Villages45,103
Panchayats8,058
Police Districts43
Police Stations1064

Divisions and Districts

There are 38 districts in Bihar, grouped into 9 divisions —Patna, Tirhut, Saran, Darbhanga, Kosi, Purnia, Bhagalpur, Munger and Magadh —are as listed below.

Sub-divisions

Sub-divisions (Anumandal) in Bihar are like sub-districts. There are 101 subdivisions in Bihar.

Blocks

The Indian state of Bihar is divided into 534 CD Block called blocks.[1] [2]

List of Blocks in Bihar

District Block
Gurua
Konch
Manpur
Paraiya
BankeBazar
Imamganj
Dumariya
Barachatti
wazirganj
Sherghati
Tekari
District Block
NawadaAkbarpur
NawadaGovindpur
NawadaHisua
NawadaKashichak
NawadaKawakol
NawadaMeskaur
NawadaNardiganj
NawadaNarhat
NawadaNawada
NawadaPakribarawan
NawadaRajauli
NawadaRoh
NawadaSirdala
NawadaWarisaliganj
District Block
BhagalpurBihpur
BhagalpurGopalpur
BhagalpurNaugachhia
BhagalpurIsmailpur
BhagalpurRangrachowk
BhagalpurNarayanpur
BhagalpurSabour
BhagalpurSanhaula
BhagalpurGoradih
BhagalpurKharik
District Block
Andar
Barharia
Basantpur
Bhagwanpur Hat
Darauli
Daraundha
Goriakothi
Guthani
Hasanpura
Hussainganj, Siwan
Lakri Nabiganj
Maharajganj
Mairwa
Nautan
Panchrukhi
Raghunathpur, Siwan
Siswan
Siwan
Ziradei
District Block
Bhagwanpur
Bidupur
Chehrakala
Desari
Goraul
Hajipur
Jandaha
Lalganj
Mahnar
Mahua
Patedhi Belsar
Patepur
Raghopur, Vaishali
Rajapakar
Sahdei Buzurg
Vaishali
!District!Block
MadhepuraAlamnagar
MadhepuraBihariganj
MadhepuraChousa
MadhepuraGamhariya
MadhepuraGhelardh
MadhepuraGwalpara
MadhepuraKumarkhand
MadhepuraMadhepura
MadhepuraMurliganj
MadhepuraPuraini
MadhepuraShankarpur
MadhepuraSingheshwar
MadhepuraUdakishunganj

Urban Local Government

Municipal Bodies

As per Census 2011, Bihar is the second least urbanised state in the country, with a rate of urbanisation of 11.3%, as compared to the national rate of 31.16%.[3] [4] The state has 139 StatutoryTowns and 60 Census Towns.[5]

For the administration of the urban areas, Bihar has 19 municipal corporations, 88 nagar parishads (city councils), and 154 nagar panchayats (town councils).[6] [7] [8] [9] [10] Bihar has one municipal act to establish and govern all municipalities in the state: Bihar Municipal Act, 2007.[11]

As per a 2017 report by the Comptroller and Auditor General of India, Urban Local Bodies (ULBs) in Bihar carry out 12 out of 18 functions, and the remaining 6 are carried out by Bihar state government departments.[12] The Fifth Bihar State Finance Commission report states that the ULB funds are ‘grossly inadequate for their assigned functions, they are unable to utilize even that’.[13]

The Bihar Municipal Act, 2007 creates the following categories of urban areas based on their population. All three types of urban areas must have at least 75% of their population engaged in non-agricultural work.

Types of Urban Areas according to the Bihar Municipal Act, 2007
TypePopulation CriteriaType of Local Body
CityLarger urban area: 2 lakh or moreMunicipal Corporation
TownMedium urban area: 40 thousand or more but less than 2 lakhMunicipal Council
Small Town or Transitional Area12 thousand and more

but less than 40 thousand

Nagar Panchayat
Further, depending on the population size, the Act prescribes the minimum and maximum number of councillors/wards allowed within each type of local government.
Minimum and Maximum number of Councillors/Wards Allowed according to the Bihar Municipal Act, 2007
Population RangeMinimumIncremental NumberMaximum
Municipal Corporations
Above 10 lakh67One additional Councillor for every 75,000 above 10

lakh

75
Above 5 lakh up to 10 lakh 57One additional Councillor for every 50,000 above 5

lakh

67
Above 2 lakh up to 5 lakh 45One additional Councillor for every 25,000 above 2

lakh

57
Municipal Council
Class 'A' Municipal Council 42One additional Councillor for every 15,000 above

1,50,000

45
Class 'B' Municipal Council 37One additional Councillor for every 10,000 above 1

lakh

42
Class 'C' Municipal Council 25One additional Councillor for every 5,000 above

40, 000

37
Nagar Panchayat
Nagar Panchayat 10One additional Member for every 2,000 above 12,000 25
The Act mentions the following key positions as well as committees for ULBs:

Ward Committees

Bihar Municipal Act, 2007 mandates the establishment of Ward Committees through the Bihar Urban Local Body (Community Participation) Rules, 2013.[14] Section 31 of the Bihar Municipal Act, 2007 mandates the establishment of Ward Committees for each ward of a municipality. The ward level elected councillor would be the chairperson of their respective Ward Committee. Up to 10 representatives from the civil society belonging to the ward would be nominated into the committee by the ULB.

Even though the creation of ward committees is mandated in municipalities, they have not been formed in Bihar.[15]

Government

See main article: Government of Bihar. Like other states in India, the head of state of Bihar is the Governor, appointed by the President of India on the advice of the central government. His or her post is largely ceremonial. The Chief Minister is the head of government and is vested with most of the executive powers. Patna is the capital of Bihar.

The Patna High Court, located in Patna, has jurisdiction over the whole state. The present legislative structure of Bihar is bicameral. The Legislative houses are the Bihar Vidhan Sabha (Bihar Legislative Assembly) and Bihar Vidhan Parishad (Bihar Legislative Council). Their normal term is five years, unless dissolved earlier.

Legislature

See main article: Bihar Vidhan Parishad and Bihar Vidhan Sabha.

See also: Vidhan Parishad and Vidhan Sabha.

Bihar is one of the six states where bicameral legislature exists. Other states are Uttar Pradesh, Karnataka, Maharashtra, Telangana and Andhra Pradesh. The Vidhan Parishad serves as the upper house and Vidhan Sabha serves as the lower house of a bicameral legislature. The current strength of the Bihar Vidhan Parishad is 75 (63 Elected + 12 Nominated) is a permanent body. The current strength of the Bihar Vidhan Sabha is 243 and is not a permanent body which means it is subject to dissolution.

Judiciary

See also: Judiciary of India.

High court

See also: High courts of India. The Patna High Court (Hindi: पटना उच्च न्यायालय) is the High Court of the state of Bihar and was established on 9 February 1916 and later affiliated under the Government of India Act 1915. The Patna High Court is the principle civil courts in Bihar. However, a high court exercises its original civil and criminal jurisdiction only if the subordinate courts are not authorized by law to try such matters for lack of pecuniary, territorial jurisdiction. High courts may also enjoy original jurisdiction in certain matters, if so designated especially in a state or federal law. The Patna High Court has 53 Judges which includes 40 permanent and 13 additional judges.

City Courts

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: State Profile. Government of Bihar. 6 July 2017. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20170706135323/http://gov.bih.nic.in/Profile/default.htm. 6 July 2017.
  2. Web site: 534 Bihar Blocks list. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20170828192803/http://dse.bih.nic.in/BSS%20contact.pdf. 2017-08-28.
  3. Web site: Ranjan. Sagarika. 8 February 2016. The challenge of urbanizing Bihar. 24 August 2020. Governance Today.
  4. Web site: Provisional Population Totals: Urban Agglomerations and Cities. 24 August 2020. Census India.
  5. Web site: Provisional Population Totals: Bihar. 24 August 2020. Census India.
  6. Web site: Bihar Civic elections likely in May 2017. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20170331031251/https://www.telegraphindia.com/1170330/jsp/bihar/story_143389.jsp#.WNziu7lMTcs. 31 March 2017. 30 March 2017.
  7. News: Pandey. Ashutosh Kumar. 20 March 2017. बिहार : नगर विकास एवं आवास विभाग की पहल, पुनर्गठन से नगर परिषदों की बढ़ जायेगी संख्या. hi. Bihar: Initiatives of the Department of Urban Development and Housing, will increase the number of city councils by restructuring. Prabhat Khabar. live. 19 February 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20170324174135/http://www.prabhatkhabar.com/news/patna/reorganization-will-increase-the-number-of-city-councils/956843.html. 24 March 2017.
  8. Web site: पहली बार कोई महिला बनेगी पटना नगर निगम की मेयर. For the first time, a woman will become the mayor of Patna Municipal Corporation. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20170324175018/http://www.prabhatkhabar.com/news/patna/story/954291.html. 24 March 2017. 24 March 2017.
  9. Web site: Ward delimitation begins in Chhapra. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20170227073049/http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/patna/ward-delimitation-begins-in-chhapra/articleshow/57299170.cms. 27 February 2017. 24 March 2017.
  10. Web site: 14 February 2017. छपरा को निगम बख्तियारपुर को मिला नगर परिषद का दर्जा. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20170324181148/http://www.bhaskar.com/news/BIH-PAT-HMU-MAT-latest-patna-news-020501-2002341-NOR.html. 24 March 2017. 24 March 2017.
  11. Web site: Bihar Municipal Act, 2007. 24 August 2020. Urban Development and Housing Department, Government of Bihar.
  12. Web site: Report of the Comptroller and Auditor General of India on Local Bodies for the year ended March 2016. 24 August 2020. Comptroller and Auditor General of India.
  13. Web site: Final Report for 2015-20 of the Fifth State Finance Commission Bihar. 24 August 2020. Finance Department, Government of Bihar.
  14. Web site: Bihar Urban Local Body (Community Participation) Rules, 2013. 24 August 2020. Bare Acts Live.
  15. Web site: National Consultation on Urban Governance: Key Findings from 21 States. 24 August 2020. Praja.