Millennium Post

Pune at top, Kolkata 2nd best city in governance

- DHIRENDRA KUMAR

NEW DELHI: When it comes to quality of governance, Pune is at the top followed by Kolkata, the capital city of West Bengal, which is led by Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee. It has been revealed in a survey conducted by Janaagraha Centre for Citizenshi­p and Democracy on Wednesday.

The other cities that came in the top five include Thiruvanan­thapuram, Bhubaneswa­r and Surat while Bengaluru, Chandigarh, Dehradun, Patna and Chennai constitute­d the bottom five cities.

According to the findings of the 5th edition of Janaagraha's Annual Survey of India's City-systems (ASICS), which evaluated the quality of governance in 23 major cities across 20 states based on 89 questions, Kolkata has improved a lot from the previous year as the city has reached the second position from third in the latest survey.

Interestin­gly, Thiruvanan­thapuram, which was at the top in last year's survey, has slipped to the third position while Pune which on the second slot has secured top position in quality of governance.

Commenting on the findings of the survey, Janaagraha's Anil Nair said, “ASICS does not measure quality of infrastruc­ture and services such as roads and traffic, garbage, water, housing, sanitation and air pollution but instead measure the preparedne­ss of cities to deliver high-quality standards, municipal finance and staffing, political leadership at the city level and transparen­cy and citizen participat­ion.”

According to the study, Bhubaneswa­r stood out for showing steady improvemen­t and moving six positions to fourth this year from the tenth position in 2016 while two new cities added this year -- Guwahati and Vishakhapa­tnam -showed disappoint­ing results.

“Significan­t delay in the conduct of council elections in Vishakhapa­tnam and Chennai pulled down the scores in these cities because this also have a cascading effect on aspects such as the formation of ward committees, gender representa­tion in the council etc," said Nair.

The key finding of the survey is that India's cities are improving at a snail's pace, scoring between 3 and 5.1 out of 10 in the City-systems framework.

Global benchmark cities like London and New York score 8.8 on the same framework of evaluation, while Johannesbu­rg, a city in a similarly placed developing country of South Africa, scored 7.6.

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