CHAPTER 12
Grassroots Democracy – Part 3
Local Government in Urban Areas
Exploring Society: India and Beyond
Class Notes + Worksheet with Answers
I desire that a full-fledged local body should be immediately formed, so that people may know really what is an administration, what are the franchise, what are the powers, what are the rights and what are the privileges in a small sphere, in their own town, in their own villages. — Rustom K. Sidhwa, Member, Constituent Assembly (13 October 1949) |
📖 CHAPTER NOTES
- Introduction — Urban Governance
Participatory Democracy: A democracy where citizens actively participate in governance at ALL levels — rural, urban, state and national
Why cities are more complex: Cities like Mumbai, Chennai, Kolkata have millions of people from different states, religions, languages and backgrounds — far more diverse and complex than villages
In Chapter 11, we studied the LEFT side of the governance pyramid (Panchayati Raj — rural). In Chapter 12, we study the RIGHT side (Urban Local Bodies).
Key Concept | Good governance aims to EMPOWER citizens so they can actively participate in how their area is managed. This works both in rural (Panchayati Raj) and urban (Urban Local Bodies) contexts. |
- Urban Local Bodies (ULBs) — What Are They?
Definition: Urban local bodies are local government structures in urban areas. They are DECENTRALISED — instead of one central authority, local communities have a direct say on how their areas are managed.
◆ Structure of Urban Governance
Level / Body | Role & Composition |
Municipal Corporation / Council / Nagar Panchayat | Top governing body of the city. Elected councillors (ward members) make policies for the city. Mayor/Chairman heads it. Responsible for all city services. |
Ward Committee | Intermediate body for a ward. Citizens elect ward members/councillors. Supervises ward-level issues and reports to Municipal Corporation. |
People of the Ward | Base level — citizens of the ward. They elect ward members and participate in city governance. Their votes, feedback and reporting drive the whole system. |
◆ Cities Are Divided into Wards 🏙️
- A WARD is a smaller unit of a city/town — like a ward in a hospital (smaller unit of a bigger building)
- Ward committees look after each ward’s problems — health camps, anti-plastic drives, road issues, drainage blockage
- Ward committee members are ELECTED by citizens of that ward
- Precise functioning of wards differs from state to state
- Three Types of Urban Local Bodies — Based on Population
Urban Local Body | City Population | Examples |
Municipal Corporation (Mahanagar Nigam) | Above 10 lakhs (Large cities) | Mumbai, Chennai, Delhi, Kolkata, Bengaluru, Hyderabad, Indore, Pune, Jaipur |
Municipal Council (Nagar Palika) | 1 to 10 lakhs (Medium towns) | District towns and mid-sized cities like Shimla, Mysuru, Raipur (before expansion) |
Nagar Panchayat (Town Panchayat) | Smaller populations (Small towns) | Towns transitioning from rural to urban areas, smaller tehsil towns |
Easy Memory Trick | BIG city (10L+) = BIG name: Municipal CORPORATION. MEDIUM city (1–10L) = Municipal COUNCIL. SMALL town = Nagar PANCHAYAT (like a Panchayat but for a small urban area) |
- Functions of Urban Local Bodies
Function | What the ULB Does |
Water Supply | Safe drinking water supply and management; water charges from citizens |
Solid Waste Management | Garbage collection, disposal and waste segregation campaigns |
Roads & Infrastructure | Building and maintaining city roads, flyovers, footpaths, streetlights |
Drainage & Sewage | Maintaining drains, preventing waterlogging, sewage treatment |
Property Tax | Collecting property tax — a major source of income for the ULB |
Trade & Business Licences | Issuing licences for shops, hoardings, trade, businesses |
Fire Services | Running fire stations, firefighting, emergency response |
Health & Sanitation | Public toilets, hospitals, health camps, vaccination drives |
Public Parks & Gardens | Maintaining parks, open spaces, tree cutting/planting |
Birth & Death Records | Issuing marriage/birth/death certificates (CRM services) |
Education | Municipal schools and school buildings in city areas |
Burial/Cremation Grounds | Maintaining burial grounds and cremation facilities |
Economic & Social Development | Planning local development, slum improvement, poverty relief |
Grievance Redressal | CRM — citizen complaint systems (online and offline) |
◆ How Do ULBs Get Money? (Sources of Income)
- Property tax — paid by owners of houses, shops, buildings to the municipal body
- Water charges — fees for water supply connections
- Trade/business licences — fees for shops, hoardings, street vendors
- Government grants — from State and Central governments
- Paid services — auditorium booking, water tanker, septic tanker, ambulance (CRM services on request)
- Fines — for violations like littering, building code violations
- Citizens’ Duties — Participatory Democracy in Action
Urban local bodies can only work well if CITIZENS also do their part. This is what ‘participatory democracy’ means in practice.
◆ What Responsible Citizens Should Do
- Segregate wet and dry waste — makes garbage collection easier
- Report a water leakage immediately — prevents wastage of precious water
- Pay property tax and water bills on time — gives the ULB money to work
- Do not litter or dump garbage in public spaces
- Report damaged roads, broken streetlights, blocked drains to ward committee
- Attend ward committee meetings and raise issues
- Vote in municipal elections — choose good councillors
- Plant trees and maintain public green spaces
- Report illegal construction to the authorities
- Use public transport to reduce traffic and pollution
- Indore — Cleanest City in India 🏆
Indore, Madhya Pradesh — Swachh Survekshan Champion 🥇 |
Indore has been awarded the CLEANEST CITY IN INDIA for SEVEN YEARS IN A ROW under the Swachh Survekshan government scheme. Role of Indore citizens in this achievement: • Diligent waste segregation at home (wet/dry/recyclable) • Timely handover of garbage to collection vehicles (no roadside dumping) • Not littering in public spaces — strong civic sense in the community • Active participation in cleanliness drives and campaigns • Municipal Corporation (IMC) used mobile apps and tech for complaints; citizens actively used these Key lesson: Indore proves that a clean city = Active citizens + Efficient Urban Local Body working TOGETHER. This is participatory democracy in action! |
- Historical Milestones
Historical Milestones in Indian Urban Local Bodies 🏛️ |
• 1688 — Madras Corporation (now Greater Chennai Corporation) established on 29 September 1688 — OLDEST municipal institution in India. East India Company charter constituted ‘Fort St. George’ into a corporation. • 1792 — Parliamentary Act gave Madras Corporation power to levy municipal taxes — when proper municipal administration began. • 1865 — Bombay Municipal Corporation (now Municipal Corporation of Greater Mumbai / MCGM) created. • 1949 — Constituent Assembly member Rustom K. Sidhwa emphasised the importance of local self-governance so citizens ‘may know what is an administration, what are the rights and privileges in their own town’. • 1992 — 74th Constitutional Amendment Act gave constitutional status to Urban Local Bodies, making them the ‘third tier’ of government. |
- Sameer & Anita Dialogue — Rural vs Urban Life
Sameer & Anita’s Conversation — Key Lessons 💬 |
Sameer (village boy) and Anita (city girl) compare their experiences: • City is crowded, fast, diverse, tall buildings — people often don’t know their neighbours • Village: everyone knows each other, works together, celebrates together, makes decisions as a community • But city still has community spirit — when a house collapsed after rains, dozens of neighbours helped clear rubble • Sameer’s example: Kids noticed a dangerously low electricity wire → reported to Gram Sabha member → pole was shifted! Key Lesson: “It seems more complicated in the city, but the idea is the same — everyone’s voice matters.” (Anita) |
- Panchayati Raj (Rural) vs Urban Local Bodies — Comparison
Aspect | RURAL — Panchayati Raj | URBAN — Urban Local Body |
Type of body | Panchayati Raj Institutions (PRI) | Urban Local Bodies (ULB) |
Applicable area | Villages / Rural areas | Cities, towns / Urban areas |
Base unit | Gram Sabha (all adult voters) | People of the Ward (all voters of ward) |
Elected body | Gram Panchayat (village level) | Ward Committee → Municipal Corporation |
Head | Sarpanch / Pradhan | Mayor (Corporation) / Chairperson (Council) |
Middle tier | Panchayat Samiti (block level) | No exact equivalent (wards handle this) |
Top tier | Zila Parishad (district level) | Municipal Corporation / Council / Nagar Panchayat |
Election | Direct election by adult voters | Direct election by adult voters (ward elections) |
Functions | Agriculture, water, village roads, schools, sanitation | City roads, water, garbage, fire, licences, city planning |
Democracy type | Direct participation in Gram Sabha; otherwise representative | Mainly representative; ward meetings for citizen input |
Scale & complexity | Smaller scale; people know each other personally | Larger, diverse, complex — anonymous city populations |
Income sources | Government grants, local taxes | Property tax, water charges, trade licences, grants |
Reservation | 1/3 seats reserved for women + SC/ST provisions | Reservations for women and disadvantaged groups |
Variation | Structure varies across states | Structure varies across states |
- Key Terms Glossary
Key Term | Meaning |
Urban Local Body (ULB) | Local government structure in urban (city/town) areas; decentralised governance mechanism |
Participatory Democracy | Democracy where citizens actively participate in governance at all levels — local, state and national |
Decentralisation | Moving power from a central authority to local bodies — so local people manage their own area |
Ward | Small unit into which a city/town is divided for governance purposes |
Ward Committee | Elected body for a ward; supervises ward issues; reports to Municipal Corporation |
Councillor / Ward Member | Elected representative of a ward; equivalent of a Panch in cities |
Mayor | Elected head of a Municipal Corporation; equivalent of Sarpanch for a large city |
Municipal Corporation | Urban local body for large cities (pop. above 10 lakhs); also called Mahanagar Nigam |
Municipal Council | Urban local body for medium towns (pop. 1–10 lakhs); also called Nagar Palika |
Nagar Panchayat | Urban local body for small towns with smaller populations |
CRM | Citizen Relationship Management — online/offline system for citizens to apply for services or file complaints |
Property Tax | Tax paid by property owners to the local body — key source of income for ULBs |
Swachh Survekshan | Government cleanliness survey scheme; Indore has won it for 7 years in a row |
74th Amendment | Constitutional amendment (1992) that gave legal status to Urban Local Bodies in India |
📝 WORKSHEET WITH ANSWERS
- Questions from Within the Chapter
◆ Let’s Explore — Why Are Cities More Complex?
Q1. Why is a city like Kolkata, Chennai or Mumbai more complex and diverse than a village or a town? Make a list of diverse communities in a city. |
✅ Cities are more complex and diverse than villages because: 4. ECONOMIC ACTIVITY: Cities have industries, stock markets, IT parks, wholesale markets, ports — all needing different rules and governance |
◆ Let’s Explore — Panchayati Raj vs Urban Local Bodies (Fig 12.2)
Q2. From Fig 12.2, what similarities and differences do you notice between Panchayati Raj and urban local government? |
✅ SIMILARITIES (from the pyramid diagram): – |
◆ Let’s Explore — Responsible Citizens’ Actions
Q3. Think of four or five actions responsible citizens might take to help their area of the city. |
✅ Actions responsible citizens can take: |
◆ Think About It — Indore’s Cleanliness Achievement
Q4. Indore has been the cleanest city in India for 7 years in a row. What could be the role of Indore citizens? |
✅ Indore citizens’ role in winning Swachh Survekshan 7 times: |
◆ Let’s Explore — How Do ULBs Fund Their Activities?
Q5. How do urban local bodies fund their activities? Are some of them paid services? |
✅ Urban Local Bodies earn money through: 2. Water charges — 3. Trade and business licences — fees from shops, hoardings, street vendors
|
- Exercise Questions and Answers
Q1. On your way to school, you and your friends notice a water pipe is leaking. What would you do? |
✅ Step-by-step action we should take: 2. REPORT PROMPTLY: Call the Municipal Corporation/Nagar Palika water department helpline number to report the leak. 3. ALTERNATIVE METHODS: Use the municipal corporation’s mobile app (like Indore’s 311 or other city apps) to file a complaint with photo evidence. 4. INFORM THE WARD MEMBER: If the helpline doesn’t respond quickly, contact the ward committee member / local councillor. 5. PREVENT WASTE: If there’s a way to reduce the flow temporarily (like finding the nearest stop valve), inform an adult who can act. 6. FOLLOW UP: Check after a day or two if the repair has been made. If not, report again.
We are NOT responsible for fixing it ourselves, but we ARE responsible for REPORTING it. That is our civic duty. |
Q2. Prepare questions to ask an Urban Local Body member when they visit your class. |
✅ Questions to ask an Urban Local Body member (Councillor/Ward Member): 1. What is your ward number and which area does it cover? 2. How many people do you represent as a ward member/councillor? 3. What are the main problems people in your ward face?
About governance: 4. How do citizens report problems to you? Is there a helpline or app? 5. How does the budget for a ward get decided? Who approves it? 6. What is your relationship with the Municipal Corporation?
About services: 7. How does your ward handle garbage collection and waste segregation? 8. What steps have you taken to improve roads or water supply in your ward? 9. How do you ensure government schemes (like housing or health) reach all citizens? |
Q3. List the expectations of adult family/community members from urban local bodies. |
✅ Expectations of citizens from Urban Local Bodies (based on common issues):
Basic Services:
1. Reliable clean water supply — no interruptions, no contamination 2. Regular, timely garbage collection — no overflowing bins or roadside dumping 3. Well-maintained roads — no potholes, proper footpaths, good drainage 4. Good streetlighting — especially in lanes and for women’s safety at night 5. Functional drainage — no waterlogging during rains
Civic Amenities:
6. Public toilets — clean, functional, enough in number 7. Well-maintained parks and green spaces 8. Fast response to complaints — water leaks, electrical faults fixed quickly Documentation: 9. Easy access to birth/death/marriage certificates without corruption or delay 10. Transparent property tax system — no arbitrary demands Governance: 11. Honest, corruption-free councillors who are accessible to citizens 12. Regular ward meetings where citizens can raise issues 13. Transparent use of public money — no misuse of ward funds |
Q4. Make a list of characteristics of a GOOD urban local body. |
✅ Characteristics of a Good Urban Local Body:
1. RESPONSIVE: Quickly attends to citizens’ complaints
2. TRANSPARENT: Publishes accounts, budgets and plans so citizens can see how money is being spent
3. INCLUSIVE: Makes sure services reach ALL citizens — slum dwellers, poor, elderly, disabled — not just the rich
4. EFFICIENT: Collects garbage regularly, maintains roads, runs health camps on schedule
5. TECH-SAVVY: Has helpline numbers, mobile apps, and online portals for complaints and services
6. ENVIRONMENTALLY AWARE: Promotes waste segregation, tree planting, clean energy, water conservation
7. PARTICIPATORY: Holds regular ward meetings; encourages citizens — including women and youth — to participate
8. FINANCIALLY SOUND: Collects taxes fairly and uses money wisely; no corruption
9. ACCOUNTABLE: Elected members can be questioned and voted out if they underperform |
Q5. What are the similarities and differences between Panchayati Raj (rural) and Urban Local Bodies? |
✅✅ SIMILARITIES (from the pyramid diagram): – |
- The Big Questions
Q1. What are urban local bodies and what are their functions? |
✅ WHAT ARE URBAN LOCAL BODIES (ULBs)? Infrastructure: roads, bridges, drainage, streetlights – Water: safe supply, charges, water tankers – Waste: garbage collection, solid waste management, waste segregation etc |
Q2. Why are urban local bodies important in governance and democracy? |
✅ Urban local bodies are EXTREMELY IMPORTANT for these reasons:
1. BRINGS GOVERNMENT CLOSER TO CITIZENS: ULBs solve local problems locally — fast and efficiently.
2. PARTICIPATORY DEMOCRACY IN PRACTICE: ULBs let these citizens VOTE for ward members, ATTEND ward meetings, FILE complaints, and PARTICIPATE in local decisions.
4. DECENTRALISATION OF POWER: Instead of waiting for state or national government, local bodies handle day-to-day city needs — water, roads, waste, fire, parks. |
— END OF CHAPTER 12 NOTES AND WORKSHEET —
Prepared for classroom use | Reprint 2025-26
