Darjeeling, Sept. 7.TT: The Darjeeling
municipality couldn’t start collecting tax from tourists from September
1 as planned because it can’t decide on a name for it, nor the
modalities of payment.
Civic body chairman Amar Singh Rai, today said the launch of the tax collection would be delayed by a fortnight to a month.
The civic body had earlier decided to collect Rs 10 per tourist per day. The plan was that hotels would bill the tourists.
Rai had said the charge wouldn’t be called tourist tax and he preferred to term it conservancy or sanitation tax.
Asked about the
delay, Sangay Tshering, the president of the Janmukti Hotel Owners’
Association, today said: “We are planning to hold a meeting with the
municipality and the GTA leaders before firming up the initiative. We
have not yet decided on the name for the tax. I don’t think calling it
conservancy tax will sound good. We need to think of a good and a nice
name,” he said over phone from New Delhi.
Rai today said he had thought of the name “green tax”. “But an official decision will be taken at the council meeting,” he said.
The civic body and hoteliers were also unable to reach an agreement on how the tax could be levied on the visitors.
“I am being told
that the hoteliers don’t want to collect Rs 10 per day per tourist.
Instead, they believe it would be easy to collect just Rs 20 per tourist
irrespective of the number of days of their stay as maintaining records
would be cumbersome. These things have to be discussed with the GTA
chief executive Bimal Gurung. As things stand now, it will take a
fortnight or even a month to start the tax collection,” said Rai.
The hoteliers said the municipality should pay them the money for printing the receipts for the tax payment.
“A section of the
hotel owners wants to come up with beautifully designed coupons and they
want the cost of printing to be borne by the municipality.
Nevertheless, this is not a major issue and the initiative will start
soon,” said a civic body source.
The Darjeeling
hills get around 4 lakh tourists, including 40,000 foreigners, annually
on an average. A tourist stays in the hills for at least three days.
The earlier board
had decided to collect Rs 3 per tourist (on their arrival), Rs 20 for
four-wheelers and Rs 50 for buses upon their arrival in town.
The “tourist tax”
was collected for only one day as the civic authorities couldn’t
distinguish between the visitors and the local people. The present body
run by the Gorkha Janmukti Morcha has no plan to levy tax on tourist
vehicles.

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