Government of Tamil Nadu Department of Economics and Statistics
DISTRICT STATISTICAL HAND BOOK
CHENNAI DISTRICT
2016-2017
Chennai Airport
Chennai Ennoor Horbour
INDEX PAGE NO “A VIEW ON ORGIN OF CHENNAI DISTRICT 1 - 31 STATISTICAL HANDBOOK IN TABULAR FORM 32- 114 STATISTICAL TABLES CONTENTS
1. AREA AND POPULATION
1.1 Area, Population, Literate, SCs and STs- Sex wise by Blocks and Municipalities 32
1.2 Population by Broad Industrial categories of Workers. 33
1.3 Population by Religion 34
1.4 Population by Age Groups 34
1.5 Population of the District-Decennial Growth 35
1.6 Salient features of 1991 Census – Block and Municipality wise. 35
2. CLIMATE AND RAINFALL
2.1 Monthly Rainfall Data . 36
2.2 Seasonwise Rainfall 37
2.3 Time Series Date of Rainfall by seasons 38
2.4 Monthly Rainfall from April 2015 to March 2016 39
3. AGRICULTURE - Not Applicable for Chennai District
3.1 Soil Classification (with illustration by map)
3.2 Land Utilisation
3.3 Area and Production of Crops
3.4 Agricultural Machinery and Implements
3.5 Number and Area of Operational Holdings
3.6 Consumption of Chemical Fertilisers and Pesticides
3.7 Regulated Markets
3.8 Crop Insurance Scheme 3.9 Sericulture i
4. IRRIGATION - Not Applicable for Chennai District 4.1 Sources of Water Supply with Command Area – Blockwise.
4.2 Actual Area Irrigated (Net and Gross) by sources.
4.3 Area Irrigated by Crops.
4.4 Details of Dams, Tanks, Wells and Borewells.
5. ANIMAL HUSBANDRY 5.1 Livestock Population 40
5.2 Veterinary Institutions and Animals treated – Blockwise. 41
5.3 No.of Veterinary Hospitals 41
5.4 Diary Development 42
5.5 Poultry Development 42
5.6 Fisheries Development and Production 43
5.7 Slaughter House 43
6. BANKING AND INSURANCE
6.1 No.of Commerical Banks 43
6.2 Insurance Schemes 44 7. CO-OPERATION
7.1 Co-operative Societies 45 8. CIVIL SUPPLIES
8.1 No.of Fair Price Shops 46 8.2 Quantum of Essential Commodities distributed and their retail price 46
8.3 No.of Ration Cards (Rural and Urban) 47
8.4 Quantity supplied 47
8.5 No.of LPG Connections 48
8.6 No.of Persons waiting for LPG connection 48
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9. COMMUNICATION
9.1 Post-Offices doing postal business only 48
9.2 Post-Offices doing Post and Telegraphic Business 49
9.3 Telegraph Offices 49
9.4 No.of Telephone Exchanges, Capacity and No.in Use 49
9.5 No.of PCOs attached to each exchange 50
9.6 No.of Persons waiting for Phone Connection. 50
10. ELECTRICITY
10.1 No.of Power Stations 50
10.2 Quantum of Power purchased 51
10.3 Power Consumption Sectorwise 51
10.4 Peak Demand and Energy Output 52
10.5 Revenue from Electric Schemes and Cost per Unit 52
10.6 Transmission and Distribution of Electricity 53
10.7 Name and Address of fault report offices. 53
11. EDUCATION
11.1 Universities, Students and Teachers and Cources offered 54
11.2 Colleges for General Education, Students and Teachers 54
11.3 College for Professional Education, Students and Teachers 55
11.4 Colleges for Special Education, Students and Teachers 55
11.5 Schools for General Education, Students and Teachers 56
11.6 Schools for Professional Education, Students and Teachers 56
11.7 Schools for Special Education, Students and Teachers 57
11.8 Institutions for Other Profesional Education, Students and Teachers 57
11.9 Computer Training Centres 57
11.10 Hospitals and Inmates by Community 58 iii
11.11 Scholarships to Students by Community 58
12. FISHERIES
12.1 Fisheries Development 59
12.2 Estimated M F Production/Inland Fish Production 59
12.3 No.of Families engaged in Fishing 59 12.4 Marian Fish Production and Inland 60 12.5 No. Of Family Engaged In Fishing 60 13. HANDLOOM
13.1 No.of Focal Centres with Location details 61
13.2 No.of Societies and Varietywise Production 61
13.3 No.of Power Looms and No.of Employees working 61
13.4 No.of Families engaged 61
14. HANDICRAFTS
14.1 Name and Addresses of Handicrafts 62
14.2 Articles available in the Handicrafts 62
14.3 Value of Articles produced and Value of Articles sold 62
14.4 No.of Families engaged in Handicrafts 62
15. HEALTH AND FAMILY WELFARE
15.1 Hospitals, Dispensaries, Bed Strength, Doctors and Nurses 63
15.2 No.of Allied Pathological Units available 63
15.3 Diseasewise patients treated 63
15.4 Distribution of Medical Personnel 64
15.5 Progress of Family Welfare Programme 64
iv 16. HOUSING
16.1 Plans sanctioned, Building completed under Private Sector 65
16.2 Plans sanctioned, Building completed under Public Sector 65
16.3 Amount invested in Housing and Building activity under Public Sector 65
16.4 Construction activity of Tamil Nadu Housing Board 66
16.5 Construction activity of Tamil Nadu Slum Clearance Board 66
16.6 Construction activity of Tamil Nadu Police Housing corporation ltd 67
16.7 Index No.of Building Construction cost in Urban centres 67
16.8 Labour charges of Construction Workers. 68
17. INDUSTRIES
17.1 Results of ASI 68
17.2 Estimates of Value of Output and Value Added by Manufacture by Industries Based on ASI 68
17.3 Industrial Production 68
17.4 Production and Value of Major Minerals in the District 69
17.5 Production of Handloom Cloth 69
17.6 Small Scale Industries 69
17.7 Khadi and Village Industries 69
17.8 No.of Printing Presses 70
17.9 No.of Photocopy (Xerox) centres 70
18. FACTORIES
18.1 Registered and Working Factories 70
18.2 Employment in Working Factories 70
18.3 Trade Unions, Industrial Disputes by Strikes, Lockout and Gheraos 71
v 19. LOCAL BODIES
19.1 Municipal Bodies Area and Population by Grades 71
19.2 Municipal Bodies by Taluks 71
19.3 Panchayat Union, Village/Town Panchayats 72
19.4 Revenue Divisions, Taluks, Firkas and Revenue Villages 72
19.5 Tax Collected by Corporation/Municipality/Panchayat Union/ Town Panchayat/Village Panchayat 72
20. LABOUR AND EMPLOYMENT
20.1 No.of Persons registered during the year and Total No.of Persons waiting upto the end of the year as per Live Register 73
20.2 No.of Placement during and upto the end of the year. 73
21. LEGAL SERVICE
21.1 Judicial Divisions and Original Jurisdiction 74
21.2 Results of Civil and Criminal cases in the Court of Original Jurisdiction, Civil Suits Regular. 75
21.3 Results and Revenue cases in the courts of original jurisdiction 76
Civil suits / Criminal Regular for the year
21.4 Results of civil and Revenue cases in the courts of original jurisdiction 80 Civil suis / criminal regular
21.5 Nature of Free legal available and No. of Beneficiaries, No. of Cases isposed off in Lok Adalat during the year 80
21.6 No. of Advocates practicing in courts 80
22. LIBRARIES
22.1 List of Head and Branch Libraries in the district with details, of Members Books available and Readers 81
22.2 No.of Libraries houses in Government Building / Rental Building 81
22.3 No.of Reading Rooms 82
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23. MINING AND QUARRYING } Not Applicable 23.1 No.of Mining and Quarrying units in the district
23.2 Classification-wise production during the year
24. MANUFACTURING SECTOR
24.1 No.of Food and other allied manufacturing units in the district 82
24.2 No.of Non-Food manufacturing units in the district 82
25. MEDICAL SERVICES
25.1 No.of Medical Colleges in the district with Students and Teachers 83
25.2 No.of College of Pharmacy with Students and Teachers 83
25.3 No.of Medical Stores in the district - Category-wise 84
25.4 No.of Veterinary Colleges with Students and Teachers 84
26. MOTOR VEHICLES
26.1 No.of Motor Vehicles (Category-wise) Registered during the year and upto the end of the year 85
26.2 No.of Motor Vehicles (Category-wise) available for hire purpose during and upto the end of the year 86
26.3 No.of Persons issued with Driving Licence 88
27. NON-CONVENTIONAL ENERGY GENERATION
27.1 No.of solar energy generating units in the district with production area 89 27.2 No.of Wind Mills Generating units with production data 89
28. POLICE AND PRISONS 28.1 Police Force 90 28.2 Cognisable Offences under Indian Penal Code 91 28.3 Prisons and Convicts 92 28.4 No.of Cases Registered under PCR 93 28.5 No.of Cases Registered against Woman Harrassment and Dowry 93
vii 29. PUBLIC HEALTH 29.1 Public Health and Medical Services rendered by Organisations and Individual 94 29.2 No.of Primary Health Centres with Sub-centres 94
30. PRINTING AND PUBLICATION
30.1 No.of News papers, Weekly Magazines, Monthly Magazines, etc., Published 95
30.2 No.of Printing, presses in the district 96
31. PRICE INDICES
31.1 Index Numbers of Wholesale Prices 97 31.2 Consumer Price Index Numbers for Industrial Workers 98 31.3 Consumer Price Index Numbers for selected essential items in Rural 99 31.4 Consumer Price Index Numbers for selected essential items in Urban 100
32. QUALITY CONTROL
32.1 List of Industrial / Establishment Units having Quality Control Facilities and the products subjected to Quality Control 101
33. REGISTRATION
33.1 No.of Registration Offices in the district 101
33.2 Registration and Aggregate Value of properties transferred during
the year. 101
34. REPAIR AND SERVICES
34.1 Authorised Automobiles Repair and Service Stations 102
34.2 Authorised Electrical and Electronic goods Repair and Service Unit 102
35. RESTAURANTS AND HOTELS
35.1 Restaurants, Cafes and Other Eating and Drinking Places 103
35.2 Details of Hotels 103
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36. RECREATION AND CULTURAL SERVICES
36.1 List of Cinema Theatres and their capacities 104
36.2 List of Clubs and Associations 104
36.3 List of Motion Picture Distributors and Projection Services 105
37. SOCIAL WELFARE
37.1 Puratchi Thalaivar MGR Nutritious Meals Programme Centres 105
37.2 No.of Beneficiaries under Puratchi Thalaivar MGR Nutritious Meals Programme 105
37.3 No.of Beneficiaries under the free supply of Text Books and Uniforms 106
37.4 No.of Beneficiaries under Old Age Pension Scheme 106
37.5 Free Houses and House sites distributed to community 107
38. CONSERVANCY SERVICES
38.1 No. of Conservancy Workers engaged in Conservancy, Garbage and 107 Debris disposal and other particulars.
38.2 No.of Vehicles engaged in the conservancy services 108
39. SCIENTIFIC AND RESEARCH SERVICES
39.1 Institutions and Laboratories engaged in Research Work 108
40. STORAGE FACILITIES
40.1 List of Agricultural and Non-Agricultural Storage Godowns 108
40.2 List of Cold Storage Godowns 108
41. TEXTILES
41.1 No.of Ginning, Spinning and Weaving Mills in the district 109 41.2 Quantum of Production during the year 109
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42. TRADE AND COMMERCE
42.1 No.of Major and Minor Trade and Commercial Estate in the district 109
43. TRANSPORT
43.1 Length of Roads 109 43.2 Road Accidents 110 43.3 Register Motor Vehicles 110 43.4 Transport Corporation 111 43.5 Select indicators of overall performance of State Transport Corporation112 43.6 Railway Lines and Stations 113 43.7 Port Development 113 43.8 Airports 114 43.9 Private Transport Operations 114
44. TOURISM 44.1 Places of Tourist Attraction 115 44.2 The List of Places of Worship 115 44.3 List of Hotels and Restaurants 116 44.4 Recreation facilities 116 44.5 The List of Travel Agents 116 44.6 Train and Air Service Timings 117
45. VITAL STATISTICS
45.1 Births and Deaths registered in the district 117 45.2 Birth , Death and Infant Mortality rates in the district 117 45.3 Death by Causes 118
46. VOLUNTARY SERVICES
46.1 List of Voluntary Services available in the district for the 120 development of Rural and Urban Population
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47. WATER WORK AND SUPPLY
47.1 No.of Schemes Operated in the district 120
47.2 No.of Workers engaged in the Water Works and Supply 121
47.3 No.of House connections, fountains 121
48 Fire and Rescue services
48.1 Fire and Rescue services 121
xi ORIGIN OF CHENNAI
Chennai, originally known as Madras Patnam, was located in the province of Tondaimandalam, an area lying between Pennar river of Nellore and the Pennar river of Cuddalore. The capital of the province was Kancheepuram.Tondaimandalam was ruled in the 2nd century A.D. by Tondaiman Ilam Tiraiyan, who was a representative of the Chola family at Kanchipuram. It is believed that Ilam Tiraiyan must have subdued Kurumbas, the original inhabitants of the region and established his rule over Tondaimandalam
Chennai also known as Madras is the capital city of the Indian state of Tamil Nadu. Located on the Coromandel Coast off the Bay of Bengal, it is a major commercial, cultural, economic and educational center in South India. It is also known as the "Cultural Capital of South India"
The area around Chennai had been part of successive South Indian kingdoms through centuries. The recorded history of the city began in the colonial times, specifically with the arrival of British East India Company and the establishment of Fort St. George in 1644. On Chennai's way to become a major naval port and presidency city by late eighteenth century. Following the independence of India, Chennai became the capital of Tamil Nadu and an important centre of regional politics that tended to bank on the Dravidian identity of the populace.
According to the provisional results of 2011 census, the city had 4.68 million residents making it the sixth most populous city in India; the urban agglomeration, which comprises the city and its suburbs, was home to approximately 8.9 million, making it the fourth most populous metropolitan area in the country and 31st largest urban area in the world.
Chennai's economy has a broad industrial base in the automobile, computer, technology, hardware manufacturing and healthcare sectors. As of 2012, the city is India's second largest exporter of information technology (IT) and business process outsourcing (BPO) services. A major part of India's automobile industry is based in and around the city thus earning it the nickname "Detroit of India". Chennai is an important centre for Carnatic music and hosts a large cultural event, the annual Madras Music Season, which includes performances by hundreds of artists. The city is one of the important centres for Bharata Natyam, a classical dance form. The Tamil film industry—colloquially known as Kollywood—is based in the city. 1
CHANGE OF NAME OF CHENNAI
The name Chennai is a shortened form of Chennapattanam, the name of the town that grew around Fort St. George, which was built by the English in 1639. There are two versions about the origin of the name Chennapattanam: according to one version, Chennapattanam was named after the Telugu ruler Damarla Chennappa Nayakudu, Nayaka of Kalahasthi and Vandavasi, father of Damarla Venkatadri Nayakudu, from whom the English acquired the town in 1639. The first official use of the name Chennai is said to be in a sale deed, dated 8 August 1639, to Francis Day of the English East India Company. According to the second account, Chennapattanam was named after the Chenna Kesava Perumal Temple; the word chenni in Tamil means face, and the temple was regarded as the face of the city
The city's colonial name, Madras, is believed to have been derived from Madraspattinam, a fishing village north of Fort St. George. However, it is uncertain whether the name 'Madraspattinam' was in use before European influence The military map makers believed Madras was originally Mundir-raj, or abbreviatedly, Mundiraj. Other arguments suggest that the Portuguese, who arrived in the area in the 16th century, had named the village Madre de Deus, meaning the Mother of God. Another possibility is that the village's name came from the prominent Madeiros family of Portuguese origin, which consecrated the Madre de Deus Church in the Santhome locality of Chennai in 1575. Another theory concludes that the name Madras was given to Chennapattanam after it was taken from a similarly named Christian priest while other parties are of the opinion that it might have been taken from a fisherman by the name of Madrasan, or from religious Muslim schools which were referred to as Madrasahs, or the word Madhu-ras, which means honey in Tamil.
After the British gained possession of the area in the 17th century, the two towns, Madraspattinam and Chennapattinam, were merged, and the English referred to the united town as Madrasapattinam. The state government officially changed the name to Chennai in 1996, at a time when many Indian cities were being renamed. However, the name Madras continues to be commonly used for the city, as well as for places named after the city, such as the University of Madras.
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HISTORY OF CHENNAI
The region around Chennai has served as an important administrative, military, and economic centre for many centuries. During 1st century Common Era, a poet and weaver named Thiruvalluvar lived in the town of Mylapore (a neighbourhood of present Chennai). From 1st century Common Era until 12th Common Era the region of present Tamil Nadu and parts of south India was ruled by the Cholas. Stone age implements have been found near Pallavaram in Chennai.
According to the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI), Pallavaram was a megalithic cultural establishment, and pre-historic communities resided in the settlement. The Pallavas of Kanchi built the areas of Mahabalipuram and Pallavaram during the reign of Mahendravarman I. They also defeated several kingdoms including the Cheras, Cholas and Pandyas who ruled over the area before their arrival. Sculpted caves and paintings have been identified from that period. Ancient coins dating to around 500 BC have also been unearthed from the city and its surrounding areas. A portion of these findings belonged to the Vijayanagara Empire, which ruled the region during the medieval period.
An 18th century portrait depicting Fort St. George, the first major British settlement in India and the foundation stone of Chennai.
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Gradually, the city grew into a major naval base and became the central administrative center for the British in South India. With the advent of railways in India in the 19th century, the thriving urban centre was connected to other important cities such as Bombay and Calcutta, promoting increased communication and trade with the hinterland. Madras was the only Indian city to be attacked by the Central Powers during World War I, when an oil depot was shelled by the German light cruiser SMS Emden on 22 September 1914, as it raided shipping lanes in the Indian Ocean, causing disruption to shipping.
After India gained its independence in 1947, the city became the capital of Madras State, which was renamed as Tamil Nadu in 1969. The violent agitations of 1965 against the compulsory imposition of Hindi in the state marked a major shift in the political dynamics of the city and eventually it had a big impact on the whole state. On 26 December 2004, an Indian Ocean tsunami lashed the shores of Chennai, killing 206 people in Chennai and permanently altering the coastline.
ENVIRONMENT OF CHENNAI
Chennai is on a flat coastal plain, as shown on this Landsat 7 map.
Chennai, sometimes referred to as the "Gateway to South India," is located on the south–eastern coast of India in the north–eastern part of Tamil Nadu on a flat coastal plain known as the Eastern Coastal Plains. Its average elevation is around 6.7 metres (22 ft), and its highest point is 60 m (200 ft).
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Two major rivers meander through Chennai, the Cooum River (or Koovam) through the centre and the Adyar River to the south. A third river, the Kortalaiyar, flows through the northern fringes of the city before draining into the Bay of Bengal, at Ennore. Adyar and Cooum rivers are heavily polluted with effluents and waste from domestic and commercial sources. The state government periodically removes silt and pollutants from the Adyar river, which is less polluted than the Cooum. A protected estuary on the Adyar forms a natural habitat for several species of birds and animals. The Buckingham Canal, 4 km (2.5 mi) inland, runs parallel to the coast, linking the two rivers. The Otteri Nullah, an east–west stream, runs through north Chennai and meets the Buckingham Canal at Basin Bridge. Several lakes of varying size are located on the western fringes of the city. Some areas of the city have the problem of excess iron content in groundwater. Chennai is classified as being in Seismic Zone III, indicating a moderate risk of damage from earthquakes.
A part of the Adyar River forms a tidal creek before joining the sea
Chennai's soil is mostly clay, shale and sandstone
Clay underlies most of the city, chiefly Manali, Kolathur, Maduravoyal, K. K. Nagar, Semmencherry, Alapakkam, Vyasarpadi and Anna Nagar.
Sandy areas are found along the river banks and coasts, and include areas such as Tiruvottiyur, George Town, Madhavaram, New Washermanpet, Chepauk, Mylapore, Porur, Adyar, Besant Nagar and Uthandi. In these areas, rainwater runoff percolates quickly through the soil.
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Areas having hard rock surface include Guindy, Nanganallur, Pallikaranai, Alandur, Jaladampet, Velachery, Adambakkam and a part of Saidapet and Perungudi. The ground water table in chennai is at 4-5m below ground in most of the areas, which was considerably improved and maintained through the mandatory rain water harvesting system.
URBAN STRUCTURE OF CHENNAI
Chennai is divided into four broad regions: North, Central, South and West. North Chennai is primarily an industrial area. South Chennai and West Chennai, previously mostly residential, are fast becoming commercial, home to a growing number of information technology firms, financial companies and call centres. The city is expanding quickly along the Old Mahabalipuram Road and the Grand Southern Trunk Road (GST Road) in the south and towards Ambattur, Koyambedu and Sriperumbdur in the west.
BEACHES AND PARKS OF CHENNAI
Pond at the Semmozhi Poonga
The old corporation limit of Chennai has a total coast length of about 19 km, which has more than doubled with the expanded corporation limits. Marina Beach runs for 6 km (3.7 mi), spanning along the shoreline of the city between the deltas of Cooum and Adyar, and is the second longest urban beach in the world Elliot's Beach lies south of the Adyar delta.
Chennai is one of the few cities in the world that accommodates a national park, the Guindy National Park, within its limits The city has an estimated 4.5 percent of its area under green cover. This enables Chennai residents to go birding in Chennai. The seven zones of the
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old corporation limits has about 260 parks, many of which suffer poor maintenance. The city has a per capita park space of 0.41 sq m, which is the least among all metros in India. The eight zones in the newly added areas of the city have about 265 locations that have been identified for development of new parks. The largest among the parks is the 358-acre Tholkappia Poonga, developed to restore the fragile ecosystem of the Adyar estuary. The horticulture department- owned Semmozhi Poonga is an 20-acre botanical garden located in the downtown.
POLITICS OF CHENNAI
Being the capital of the Madras Province that covered a vast area of the Deccan region, Chennai remained the centre of politics in the southern region of India during the British era. After Independence, it remained the centre of political activities of the state of Tamil Nadu.
Chennai is the birthplace of the idea of the Indian National Congress, commonly known as the Congress Party. Founded by Indian and British members of the Theosophical Society movement, most notably A.O. Hume, the idea was originally conceived in a private meeting of 17 men after a Theosophical Convention held in the city in December 1884. During the first 50 years of the Indian National Congress, the city played host to its conferences seven times in 1887, 1894, 1898, 1903, 1908, 1914 and 1927, becoming one of the strong bases for the Indian independence movement. After independence, the city hosted the Congress in 1955 in its suburb of Avadi.
Chennai is also the birthplace of several regional political movements since the British era. South Indian Welfare Association, one of the earliest regional parties, was founded in 1916, which later came to be known as the Justice Party, which was the main opposition party to the Indian National Congress in the state. In 1944, the party was renamed Dravidar Kazhagam (DK) by E. V. Ramasami (popularly known as 'Periyar'). The party was a non- political party that demanded the establishment of an independent state called Dravida Nadu. However, due to the differences between its two leaders Periyar and C. N. Annadurai, the party was split. Annadurai left the party to form the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK). The DMK decided to enter into politics in 1956.
Since the 19th century, when Western scholars proposed that Dravidian languages, which dominated the southern region of India, formed a different linguistic group to that of the Indo-Aryan languages that are predominant in the north of the subcontinent, the 7
aspects of Tamil nationalism gained prominence. This resulted in the Anti-Hindi agitations in the city and across the state. However, the post-Independence re-organisation of Indian states according to linguistic and ethnic basis has moderated Tamil nationalism, especially the demand for separation from the Indian Union. The Anti-Hindi agitations in mid-1960s made the DMK more popular and more powerful political force in the state. The agitations of the 1960s played a crucial role in the defeat of the Tamil Nadu Congress party in the 1967 elections and the continuing dominance of Dravidian parties in Tamil Nadu politics.
ADMINISTRATION OF CHENNAI
The Ripon Building, commissioned in 1913, houses the Chennai Corporation.
Chennai city is governed by the Chennai Corporation (formerly ―Corporation of Madras‖), which was established in 1688. It is the oldest municipal corporation in India and the second oldest corporation in the world.
In 2011, the jurisdiction of the Chennai Corporation was expanded from 174 km2 (67 sq mi) to an area of 426 km2 (164 sq mi), dividing into three regions — North, South and Central, which covers 200 wards. The corporation is headed by an Indian Administrative Service officer. The Mayor and councillors of the city are elected through a popular vote by the residents. While the city limit was expanded to 426 km2 in 2011, the revised population is yet to be officially announced. 8
The Chennai Metropolitan Development Authority (CMDA) is the nodal agency responsible for planning and development of Chennai Metropolitan Area, which is spread over an area of 1,189 km2 (459 sq mi) covering the Chennai district and parts of Tiruvallur and Kanchipuram districts. The larger suburbs are governed by town municipalities, and the smaller are governed by town councils called panchayats. Under the gamut of the CMDA are 5 parliamentary and 28 assembly constituencies. The CMDA has drafted a second Master Plan that aims to develop satellite townships around the city. The city’s contiguous satellite towns include Mahabalipuram in the south, Chengalpattu and Maraimalai Nagar in the southwest, and Sriperumpudur, Arakkonam, Kanchipuram and Tiruvallur to the west.
Chennai, as the capital of the state of Tamil Nadu, houses the state executive and legislative headquarters primarily in the Secretariat Buildings in the Fort St George campus. The Madras High Court, is the highest judicial authority in the state, whose jurisdiction extends across Tamil Nadu and Pondicherry. Chennai has three parliamentary constituencies—Chennai North, Chennai Central and Chennai South—and elects 14 Members of the Legislative Assembly (MLAs) to the state legislature.
LAW AND ORDER OF CHENNAI
Madras High Court
The Greater Chennai Police is the main law enforcement agency in the city. It consists of 170 Police stations out of which 35 and all women police stations and is headed by a commissioner of police. The Chennai police is a division of the Tamil Nadu Police, and the administrative control lays with the Tamil Nadu Home Ministry. Chennai City Traffic Police 9
(CCTP) is responsible for the traffic management in the city. The Metropolitan suburbs are policed by the Chennai Metropolitan Police, and the outer district areas of CMDA are policed by the Kanchipuram and Thiruvallur police departments.
As of 2011 (prior to the expansion of Chennai Corporation area), Chennai city had a sanctioned strength of 14,000 police personnel. With a population density of 26,553 persons per square kilometre, the city had 1 policeman for every 413 people.
UTILITY SERVICES OF CHENNAI
The city's water supply and sewage treatment are managed by the Chennai Metro Water Supply and Sewage Board. Water is drawn from Red Hills Lake and Chembarambakkam Lake, the primary water reservoirs of the city, and treated at water treatment plants located at Kilpauk, Puzhal, Chembarambakkam and supplied to the city through 27 water distribution stations.
Garbage is dumped in two dump-yards in the city—One in Kodungaiyur and another in Perungudi, with a major portion of the latter covering the Pallikaranai marshland. In market areas, the conservancy work is done during the night. Electricity is distributed by the Tamil Nadu Electricity Board. Fire services are handled by the Tamil Nadu Fire and Rescue Service. The city, along with the suburbs, has 33 operating fire stations.
ARCHITECTURE OF CHENNAI
Parry's Corner, one of the oldest business areas of Chennai, lined up with art deco buildings.
With the history of many neighbourhoods of the city such as Mylapore and Triplicane predating that of the city itself, the architecture of Chennai ranges in a wide 10
chronology. The oldest buildings in the city dates back to 7th and 8th centuries CE, which include the Kapaleeshwarar Temple in Mylapore and the Parthasarathy Temple in Triplicane build in the Dravidian architecture. This architecture style includes various styles such as those of the Pallavas, the Cholas, and the Vijayanagara empires. The associated Agraharam architecture, which consists of traditional row houses surrounding a temple, can still be seen in these areas. The heritage temples at Mamallapuram at the outskirts of the city are some of the examples of the Pallava architecture.
The Chepauk Palace in the city, designed by Paul Benfield, is said to be the first Indo- Saracenic building in India. Since then, many of the colonial-era buildings in the city were designed in this style of architecture, which is most apparent around the Fort St. George built in 1640. Most of these were designed by English architects Robert Fellowes Chisholm and Henry Irwin. The best examples of this style include the Madras High Court (built in 1892), Southern Railway headquarters, Ripon Building, Government Museum, Senate House of the University of Madras, Amir Mahal, Bharat Insurance Building, Victoria Public Hall and the College of Engineering. The residential architecture in the city was based on the bungalow or the continuous row house prototypes. Gothic revival style buildings include the Chennai Central and Chennai Egmore railway stations. The Santhome Church, which is originally built by the Portuguese in 1523 and is believed to house the remains of the apostle St. Thomas, was rebuilt in 1893 in neo-Gothic style. By the early 20th century, the art deco too made its entry upon the city's urban landscape. From 1930s onwards, many buildings in George Town were built in this style, including the United India building (presently housing LIC) and the Burma Shell building (presently the Chennai House), both built in the 1930s, and the Dare House, built in 1940. Other examples include the Bombay Mutual building (presently housing LIC) and the South Indian Chamber of Commerce building.
After Independence, the city witnessed a rise in the Modernism style of architecture. The completion of the LIC Building in 1959, the tallest building in the country at that time, marked the transition from lime-and-brick construction to concrete columns in the region. The presence of the weather radar at the Chennai Port, however, prohibited the construction of buildings taller than 60 m around a radius of 10 km. In addition, the floor-area ratio (FAR) in the central business district is also 1.5, much less than that of smaller cities of the country. This resulted in
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the city expanding horizontally, unlike other metropolitan cities where vertical growth is prominent. On the contrary, the peripheral regions, especially on the southern and south- western sides, are experiencing vertical growth with the construction of buildings up to 50 floors.
DEMOGRAPHICS OF CHENNAI
Population of Chennai city Census Population %±
1791 300,000 —
1871 367,552 —
1881 405,848 10.4%
1891 452,518 11.5%
1901 509,346 12.6%
1911 518,660 1.8%
1921 526,911 1.6%
1931 647,232 22.8%
1941 777,481 20.1%
1951 1,416,056 82.1%
1961 1,729,141 22.1%
1971 2,469,449 42.8%
1981 3,266,034 32.3%
1991 3,841,396 17.6%
2001 4,343,645 13.7%
2011 4,646,732 6.5%
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A resident of Chennai is called a Chennaite. According to the provisional population results of 2011, the city had a population of 4,681,087, with a density of 26,903 per km² and the urban agglomeration had a population of 8,696,010. The city registered a growth rate of 7.8% during the period 2001–2011. In 2001, the population density in the city was 24,682 per km² (63,926 per mi²), while the population density of the metropolitan area was 5,922 per km² (15,337 per mi²), making it one of the most densely populated cities in the world. The Chennai metropolitan area is the fourth most populated agglomeration in India and 31st largest urban area in the world The sex ratio is 951 females for every 1,000 males, slightly higher than the national average of 944. The average literacy rate rose from 85.33% in 2001 to 90.33% in 2011 much higher than the national average of 79.5%. However, the city has the fourth highest population of slum dwellers among major cities in India, with about 820,000 people (18.6% of the city's population) living in slum conditions. According to 2011 census, the chennai district has 11 lakh households, with 51% of them living in rented houses.
Religion in Chennai
Religion Percentage Hindu 81.3% Muslim 9.4% Christian 7.6% Jains 1.1%
The majority of the population in Chennai are Tamils. Tamil is the primary language spoken in Chennai. English is spoken largely by white-collar workers, often mixed into Tamil. Telugus form the majority among the non-Tamil communities. In 2001, out of the 937,000 migrants (21.6% of its population) in the city, 74.5% were from other parts of the state, 23.8% were from rest of India and 1.7% were from outside the country. Some minority communities are Marwaris, Oriyas, Malayalis, Anglo-Indians, Bengalis and Punjabi and Kannadigas. According to the 2001 census, Hindus constitute about 81.3% of the city's population, and Muslims (9.4%), Christians (7.6%) and Jains (1.1%) are other major religious groups.
HOUSING OF CHENNAI
Per 2011 census, there are 1.1 million households in the city and the residential housing stock available is 1.15 million – a surplus of about 50,000 houses. About 43,700 of 13
them are kept vacant. In the suburbs of Chennai located in Tiruvallur and Kancheepuram districts, the figures of vacant houses 56,000 and 71,000, respectively. Of the existing housing stock in the city, about 200,000 houses are not in good condition, necessitating either to rebuild or build new units. About 26,000 households live in houses without any room and another 427,000 families (with an average size of five members) live in small dwelling units with only one room. An earlier estimate shows that there is a need to generate about 420,000 units for low-income groups by 2016.
ARTS AND CULTURE OF CHENNAI
Music and performing arts
Chennai is a major centre for music, art and culture in India. The city is known for its classical dance shows. In 1930, for the first time in India, Madras University introduced a course of music, as part of the Bachelor of Arts curriculum. The Madras Music Season, initiated by Madras Music Academy in 1927, is celebrated every year during the month of December. It features performances of traditional Carnatic music by many artists in and around the city. An arts festival called the Chennai Sangamam, which showcases various arts of Tamil Nadu, is held in January every year. Chennai is also known for Bharata Natyam, a classical dance form that originated in Tamil Nadu and is the oldest dance form of India. An important cultural centre for Bharata Natyam is Kalakshetra, on the beach in the south of the city. In 2012, a group of five Bharatha Natyam dancers from Chennai performed at the India Campaign during the 2012 Summer Olympics. Chennai is also home to some choirs, who during the Christmas season stage various carol performances across the city in Tamil and English.
CINEMA OF CHENNAI
Chennai is the base for the Tamil film industry, known as Kollywood . Chennai hosts major film studios, including AVM studios, so on. AVM studio is the oldest surviving studio in India. As of 2012, there are 120 cinema screens in Chennai. Chennai's theatres stage many Tamil plays; political satire, slapstick comedy, history, mythology and drama are among the popular genres.
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TOURISM AND HOSPITALITY OF CHENNAI
With temples, beaches and centres of historical and cultural significance, including the UNESCO Heritage Site of Mahabalipuram, Chennai is one of the most visited cities in India. In 2007, Chennai was the third most visited city in India by foreigners ranked after Delhi and Mumbai, with about 650,000 foreign tourists visiting the city. In 2009, Chennai attracted the highest number of foreign tourists in the country. The city serves as the gateway to the southern part of India with tourists landing in the city and starting their trip to the rest of the region. Top foreign nationals visiting the city includes those from Sri Lanka, Malaysia, and Singapore, followed by the United Kingdom, France and the United States. In 2010, the figure of foreign tourist arrival increased by 40 percent in the first half of the year About 830,620 domestic tourists arrived in Chennai in March 2011.
As of 2012, the city has 17 luxury hotels in the five-star and five-star deluxe categories with an inventory of 2,595 rooms, while five more with 1,550 rooms are under construction.
RECREATION OF CHENNAI
Zoo, beaches, and wildlife parks form the primary recreation areas of the city. The Arignar Anna Zoological Park, one of the largest zoological parks in the world, attracts nearly 2 million visitors per year The city boasts two popular beaches, the Marina and Elliot's. Guindy National Park, a protected area of Tamil Nadu, has a children's park and a snake park, which gained statutory recognition as a medium zoo from the Central Zoo Authority of India in 1995.
Chennai houses several theme parks, namely MGM Dizzee World, VGP Golden beach and Queens Land. Other important recreation centres include Madras Boat Club, which is over 140 years old, and Gymkhana Club, which is famous for its 18-hole golf courses. Built in 1867, Madras Boat Club is the second oldest rowing club in India. Chennai is home to several malls, due to its status as an IT hub.
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ECONOMY OF CHENNAI
Hyundai's manufacturing plant at Irungattukottai near Sriperumbudur.
According to Forbes magazine, Chennai is one of the fastest growing cities in the world and the only Indian city to be rated in the "Forbes-Top 10 Fastest Growing Cities in the World". It is ranked 4th in hosting the maximum number of Fortune 500 companies of India, next only to Mumbai, Delhi and Kolkata. It also is home to 24 Indian companies having an net worth of more than US$1 billion. As of 2012, the city has about 34,260 identified companies in its 15 zones, of which 5,196 companies has a paid-up capital of over 5 million. Chennai has a diversified economic base anchored by the automobile, software services, hardware manufacturing, health care and financial services industries. According to the Confederation of Indian Industry, Chennai is estimated to grow to a US$100–billion economy, 2.5 times its present size, by the year 2025. As of 2012, with 100,000 crore investment in the pipeline over 5 years, the city is poised for major industrial investment. Chennai is classified as a global city by GaWC, with a ranking of Beta based on the extent of global reach and financial influence.
The city is base to around 30 percent of India's automobile industry and 40 percent of auto components industry. A large number of automotive companies including Hyundai, Renault, Nissan Motors, Ashok Leyland, Daimler AG, Caterpillar Inc., Komatsu Limited, Ford, BMW and Mitsubishi have manufacturing plants in Chennai. The Heavy Vehicles Factory at Avadi produces military vehicles, including India's main battle tank: Arjun MBT. The Integral Coach Factory manufactures railway coaches and other rolling stock for Indian Railways. The Ambattur–Padi industrial zone houses many textile manufacturers, and an special economic zone (SEZ) for apparel and footwear manufacture has been set up in the southern suburbs of the city. Chennai contributes more than 50 percent of India's leather exports.
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Tidel Park is billed as the largest IT Park in Asia.
Many software and software services companies have development centres in Chennai, which contributed 14 percent of India's total software exports of 1,442,140 million during 2006–07, making it the second largest exporter, by city, of software in the country, behind Bangalore. The Tidel Park in Chennai was billed as Asia's largest IT park when it was built. Major software companies have their offices set up here, with some of them making Chennai their largest base. Prominent financial institutions, including the World Bank, Standard Chartered Bank, ABN AMRO, Bank of America, The Royal Bank of Scotland, Goldman Sachs, Barclays, HSBC, ING Group, Allianz, Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation, The Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ, Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank, Asian Development Bank, Credit Suisse, BNP Paribas Fortis, Deutsche Bank and Citibank have back office and development center operations in the city. Chennai is home to the national level commercial banks Indian Bankand Indian Overseas Bank and many state level co–operative banks, finance and insurance companies. Telecom and Electronics manufacturers based in and around Chennai include Nokia, Nokia Siemens, Motorola, Dell, Force10, Wipro, Zebronics, Foxconn and Siemens among others. Chennai is currently the largest electronics hardware exporter in India ,accounting for 45 % of the total exports in 2010-11.Telecom giants Ericsson and Alcatel- Lucent, pharmaceuticals giant Pfizer and chemicals giant Dow Chemicals have research and development facilities in Chennai. The TICEL bio–tech park at Taramani and Golden Jubilee bio–tech park at Siruseri houses biotechnology companies and laboratories. Chennai has a stock exchange called the Madras Stock Exchange.
A study conducted by the National Housing Bank on the residential price index of Indian cities showed that Chennai experienced the highest growth after the 2008–2012 global 17
financial crisis. Medical tourism is another important part of Chennai's economy with 45 percent of total medical tourists to India making to Chennai. The Tamil film industry and the Tamil television industry are also significant parts of Chennai's economy. The city also has a permanent exhibition complex in Nandambakkam called the Chennai Trade Centre. An estimated 100,000 people in the city have assets over 50 million. The city is the third largest market in India for luxury cars.
INFRASTRUCTURE OF CHENNAI
Communication
Chennai is one of the four cities in India through which the country is connected with the rest of the world through undersea fiber-optic cables, the other three being Mumbai, Kochi, and Tuticorin. The city is the landing point of major submarine telecommunication cable networks such as SMW4 (connecting India with Western Europe, Middle East and Southeast Asia), i2i (connecting India with Singapore), TIC (connecting India with Singapore), and BRICS (connecting India with Russia, China, South Africa, Brazil and the United States). The 3,175-km- long, 8-fiber-paired i2i has the world's largest design capacity of 8.4 terabits per second.
As of 2007, nine mobile phone service companies operate nine GSM networks and two CDMA networks in the city. There are four land line companies. Commercial and domestic broadband Internet services are provided by all the four service providers and a majority of the mobile network service providers. Chennai was the first Indian city to have the Wi-Fi facility in a widespread manner. As of 2010, there were 9.8 million mobile phone users in Chennai. In 2010, Chennai had the fourth highest number of active Internet users in India, with 2.2 million users.
Banking
Chennai is home to the first European-style banking system in India with the establishment of the 'Madras Bank' on 21 June 1683, almost a century before the establishment of the first commercial banks, such as the Bank of Hindustan and the General Bank of India, which were established in 1770 and 1786, respectively. However, the bank proved a failure. Upon the recommendation of the British Finance Committee on the formation of a government bank, the Madras Bank, then known as the 'Government Bank', started functioning again from 1806. In 1843, the bank merged with the Carnatic Bank (1788), the British Bank of Madras
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(1795) and the Asiatic Bank (1804) and became the Bank of Madras, which was one of the three Presidency banks of India, the other two being the Bank of Bengal and the Bank of Bombay. In 1921, the three Presidency banks merged to form the Imperial Bank of India, which later became the State Bank of India in 1955.
Chennai is the headquarters of the Indian Bank, the Indian Overseas Bank, and the erstwhile Bharat Overseas Bank, which merged with the Indian Overseas Bank in 2007. The city is home to the south zonal office of the Reserve Bank of India, the country's central bank, along with its zonal training centre and Reserve Bank Staff College, one of the two colleges of the bank. The city also houses the permanent back office of the World Bank, which is one of the largest buildings owned by the bank outside its headquarters in Washington, DC. The Chennai office handles corporate financial, accounting, administrative and IT services of the bank, in addition to several value-added operations of the bank that were earlier handled only in its Washington, DC office, including the bank's analytical work in bond valuation which is estimated to be US$100 billion.
HEALTH CARE OF CHENNAI
Government General Hospital
Chennai has world-class medical facilities, including both government-run and private hospitals. The government-aided hospitals include General Hospital, Adyar Cancer Institute, TB Sanatorium, and National Institute of Siddha. The National Institute of Siddha is one of the seven apex national-level educational institutions that promote excellence in Indian system of medicine and Ayurveda. Some of the popular private-run hospitals in Chennai are Apollo Hospitals, Chettinad Health City, MIOT Hospitals and Vasan Healthcare. The prime
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NABH-accredited hospitals includes Chennai Apollo Speciality Hospital, Dr Mehta Hospitals, Frontier Lifeline Hospital, Global Hospitals & Health City, Sankara Nethralaya, Agarwal Eye Hospital and Vijaya Medical & Educational Trust. Chennai attracts about 45 percent of health tourists from abroad and 30 percent to 40 percent of domestic health tourists. The city has been termed India's health capital.
The city has more than 12,500 beds in its hospitals, including about 5,000 in multi-specialty hospitals in the private sector and over 6,000 beds in the public sector. This works to 2.1 beds per 1,000 population against the national average of less than 1 bed per 1,000 population and the World Health Organisation's norms of 3 beds per 1,000 persons, higher than any other city in the country. By mid-2012, with the addition of at least 3,000 beds in four leading hospitals in the city, the bed strength of the private-sector hospitals is expected to increase by nearly 25 percent. However, only half of these 12,500 beds is used by the city's population with the rest being shared by patients from other states of the country and foreigners.
WASTEMANAGEMENT OF CHENNAI
The city generates 4,500 tonnes of garbage every day. The city has three dumpyards, one each at Perungudi, Kodungaiyur, and Pallikaranai. The corporation has planned to close these yards and create four new dumpyards at Malaipattu, Minjur, Vallur, and Kuthambakkam villages, ranging in size from 20 acres to 100 acres. The civic body also spends 4,000 million a year on solid waste management.
TRANSPORT OF CHENNAI- AIR
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The Chennai International Airport at night
Chennai serves as a major gateway to southern India. Chennai International Airport, comprising the Anna international terminal and the Kamaraj domestic terminal with a total passenger movements of 12.9 million and aircraft movements of 120,127 in 2011–2012, is the third busiest airport and the second busiest cargo terminus in India. Chennai handles 316 flights a day, again making it at third spot among Indian Airports. The city is connected to major hubs across Asia, Europe, and North America through more than 30 national and international carriers.
The existing airport is undergoing further modernisation and expansion with an addition of 1069.99 acres, while a new greenfield airport is to be constructed at an estimated cost of 20,000 million in Sriperumbudur on 4,200 acres (17 km2) of land. The new airport is said to be likely to handle cargo spillover traffic from the existing one.
RAIL
A railway station on the MRTS line
Chennai hosts the headquarters of the Southern Railway. The city has two main railway terminals. Chennai Central station, the city's largest, provides access to other major cities as well as many other smaller towns across India, whereas Chennai Egmore provides access to destinations primarily within Tamil Nadu; however, it also handles a few inter–state trains. The Chennai suburban railway network, one of the oldest in the country, facilitates transportation withinn the city. It consists of four broad gauge sectors terminating at two locations in the city, namely Chennai Central and Chennai Beach. While three sectors are operated on-grade, the fourth sector is majorly an elevated corridor, which links Chennai Beach
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to Velachery and is interlinked with the remaining rail network. Construction is underway for an underground and elevated Rapid Transit System locally known as Chennai Metro Rail. There is also a proposal to construct a monorail network to augment the existing public transportation system in the city. The Chennai Metro Rail project construction began in June 2009 and the first stretch covering the seven stations from Koyambeduto Alandur over a distance of 10 kilometres (6.2 mi), began operation on 29 June 2015. On 21 September 2016 the section between Chennai airport and Little Mount commenced operations]. As on 14th Oct 2016, Chennai Metro opened operations on the 1.28 km stretch from Alandur to St Thomas Mount, thus making the entire elevated stretch of Green line and also the entire elevated stretch of Chennai Metro Phase I is now functional.
ROAD
Chennai is one of the cities in India that is connected by the Golden Quadrilateral system of National Highways. It is connected to other Indian cities by four major National Highways (NH) that originate in the city. They are NH 4 to Mumbai (via Bangalore), NH 5 to Kolkata (via Bhubaneswar), NH 45 to Theni (via Tiruchirapalli) and NH 205 to Anantapur, Andhra Pradesh (via Tirupati). Chennai is connected to other parts of the state and the Union Territory of Pondicherry by state highways.
Cloverleaf interchange at Kathipara Junction
The government has constructed grade separators and flyovers at major intersections, and built Inner Ring Road and Outer Ring Road The Gemini flyover, built in 1973 crosses over the arterial road, and eases the traffic movements towards Anna Salai and 22
towards the Kathipara Flyover. As of 2011, according to the Transport Department, there were 2.58 million two–wheelers and 0.56 million four–wheelers in the city, and the Metropolitan Transport Corporation (MTC) bus fleet were 3,421, which was 0.1% of the total vehicular population of the city
A bus operated by the Metropolitan Transport Corporation
The Chennai Mofussil Bus Terminus (CMBT) is the largest bus station in Asia. It is the main intercity bus station of Chennai, administered by 7 government-owned transport corporations, which operate intercity and interstate bus services. There are many private bus companies that provide similar transport services. The MTC provides an exclusive intercity bus service, consisting of 3,497 buses on 729 routes, which provides transportation to 5.52 million passengers daily The Tamil Nadu State Transport Corporation operates Volvo air-conditioned services from Chennai to nearby cities like Pondicherry, Vellore and Hosur.The other means of road transport in the city include Vans, regionally known as Maxi Cabs, auto rickshaws, on-call metered taxis and tourist taxis.
SEA
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Containers at Chennai Port
The city is served by two major ports, Chennai Port, one of the largest artificial ports in India, and Ennore Port. The Chennai port is the largest in Bay of Bengal, with an annual cargo tonnage of 61.46 million (2010–2011), and second busiest container hub in India, with an annual container volume of 1.523 million TEUs (2010–2011). The port handles transportation of automobiles, motorcycles and general industrial cargo. The Ennore Port with an annual cargo tonnage of 11.01 million (2010–2011) handles cargo such as coal, ore and other bulk and rock mineral products. The Royapuram fishing harbour is used by fishing boats and trawlers. A mega shipyard project called the Kattupalli Shipyard cum Captive Port Complex is being built by L&T Shipbuilding at Kattupalli village near Ennore and is expected to be operational in 2012.
MEDIA OF CHENNAI
Newspaper publishing started in Chennai with the launch of a weekly, The Madras Courier, in 1785. It was followed by the weeklies The Madras Gazzette and The Government Gazzette in 1795. The Spectator, founded in 1836, was the first English newspaper in Chennai to be owned by an Indian and became the city's first daily newspaper in 1853. The first Tamil newspaper, Swadesamitran, was launched in 1899.
The major English dailies published in Chennai are The Hindu, The New Indian Express, The Deccan Chronicle and The Times of India. The evening dailies are The Trinity Mirror and The News Today. The Hindu was the city's most read English newspaper daily
EDUCATION OF CHENNAI
Madras University Senate House 24
Chennai Literacy rate of male and female are 84.25 & 78.25 respectively. Chennai has a mix of public and private (some of which also receive financial support from the government) schools. The public school system is managed by the Chennai Corporation with an enrollment of 54,855 students in over 70 schools. Tamil and English are the primary media of instruction, though several schools also use Telegu or Urdu. Public schools run by the Chennai Corporation are all affiliated with the Tamil Nadu State Board, while private schools may be affiliated with either of the Tamil Nadu Board of Secondary Education or the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE). A few schools are affiliated with the Council for the Indian School Certificate Examinations, the National Institute of Open Schooling (NIOS) board or the Montessori system. Education in Chennai starts with two years of Kindergarten from age three onward and then follows the Indian 10+2+3 plan, ten years of school, two years of higher secondary education, and three years of undergraduate education.
English is the medium of instruction in the majority of institutions for higher education. Colleges for science, arts and commerce degrees are typically affiliated with the University of Madras, which has three campuses in the city. The Indian Institute of Technology Madras (IIT Madras) and the Anna University are two well known centers for engineering education in the city. The Indian Army's Officers Training Academy is also headquarted in the city. Chennai has a plethora of libraries, including British Council Library, American Library, Connemara Public Library, and Anna Centenary Library. The Connemara Public Library is one of four National Depository Centres in India that receive a copy of all newspapers and books published in the country. The Anna Centenary Library is the largest library in India. Chennai has two CSIR research institutions namely Central Leather Research Institute and Structural Engineering Research Centre.
Chennai Book Fair, an annual book fair organized in Chennai by the Booksellers and Publishers Association of South India (BAPASI), is the largest exhibition for Tamil book publishers to display their books. The fair is typically held for about 10 days between the last week of December and the third week of January. Thirty-fifth edition of the fair was held on 2012.
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SPORTS OF CHENNAI
M. A. Chidambaram Stadium, one of the premier cricket venues in India.
Cricket is the most popular sport in Chennai It was introduced as a result of the establishment of the Madras Cricket Club in 1846. The M.A. Chidambaram Stadium in Chepauk was established in 1916 and is one of the oldest cricket stadia in India. The Chemplast Cricket Ground located inside the IIT Madras campus is another important venue for cricket matches. Prominent cricketers from the city include former Test-captains S. Venkataraghavan and Kris Srikkanth. A cricket fast bowling academy called the MRF Pace Foundation, whose coaches include Bob Simpson and Dennis Lillee, is based in Chennai. Being home to the Indian Premier League cricket team Chennai Super Kings, the city hosted the finals of the IPL's fourth and fifth editions in Chepauk.
Chennai is home to a Premier Hockey League (PHL) team, the Chennai Veerans, and has hosted many hockey tournaments such as the Asia Cup and the Men's Champions Trophy at The Mayor Radhakrishnan Stadium. Chennai has produced popular tennis players over the years, including Vijay Amritraj and Ramesh Krishnan and currently active Somdev Devvarman also grew up primarily in the city and holds a major rank. Since 1997 Chennai has been host to the only ATP World Tour event held in India, the Chennai Open.
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Chennai Open match at the SDAT Tennis Stadium.
Football and athletic competitions are held at the Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium, which also houses a multi–purpose indoor complex for competition in volleyball, basketball and table tennis. Water sports are played in the Velachery Aquatic Complex. Chennai was the venue of the South Asian Games in 1995.
Automobile racing in India has been closely connected with Chennai since its beginnings shortly after independence. Motor racing events are held on a special purpose track in Irungattukottai, Sriperumbudur which has also been the venue for several international competitions Formula One drivers Narain Karthikeyan and Karun Chandhok were born in Chennai.
Horse racing is held at the Guindy Race Course, while rowing competitions are hosted at the Madras Boat Club. The city has two 18–hole golf courses, the Cosmopolitan Club and the Gymkhana Club, both established in the late nineteenth century. The city has a rugby union team called the Chennai Cheetahs.
HISTORICAL EVENTS OF CHENNAI AT A GLANCE
1639 Madras founded . The English get Madras Patnam from Ayyapa Naicker. 1640 Francis Day and Cogan landed with 25 Europeans. Foundation laid for Fort St.George. 1668 Triplicane annexed to the city. 1678 Foundation laid for St. Mary’s Church in Fort St. George. 1679 St.Mary’s Church Completed. 27
1688 Madras City Municipal Corporation inaugurated. 1693 Egmore, Purasawalkam and Tondiarpet annexed to the City. 1708 Thiruvottiyur, Nungambakkam, Vyasarpady, Kottivakkam and Sathangadu - Five neighbouring Villages annexed; wall built around Black Town. 1711 First Printing Press erected in Madras. 1735 Chintadripet was formed. 1742 Veperi, Perimet, Perambur and Pudupakkam annexed to the city. 1746 The French return Madras to the English; Santhome and Mylapore annexed to the City. 1758 French Commander Lawly siege Madras. 1759 French siege ended. 1767 Hyder Ali’s first invasion. 1768 Chepauk palace built by Nawab of Arcot. 1769 Hyder Ali’s Second invasion. 1777 Veerappillai appointed as First Kotthawal - Hence the name Kotthawal Chavadi. 1783 Fort St. George repaired and attains the present shape. 1784 The First Newspaper –Madras Courier. 1785 First Post Office. 1795 Triplicane Big Mosque-Walajah Mosque built. 1817 Madras Literary Society founded. 1826 Board of Public Instructions founded. 1831 First Commercial Bank –Madras Bank. First Census in the City Population 39,785. 1832 Madras Club founded. 1834 First Survey School inaugurated – Later developed as Engineering College. 1835 First Medical College –
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Later became Madras Christian College. 1841 Ice House was built – Ice brought from America through ships was stored here; Later named as Vivekananda House. 1842 First Light House. 1846 Pachaiappan School; Later Pachaiappa’s College. 1851 Museum formed 1853 Zoo formed. 1855 University Board formed. 1856 First Railway –Royapuram to Arcot. 1857 Madras University founded. 1864-65 Presidency College built. 1868 Attempt to protected water supply. 1873 First Birth Registered. Madras Mail Newspaper founded. Cosmopolitan Club founded. 1874 University Senate house built. 1876-78 Great Famine – Buckingham Canal dug. 1878 The Hindu Newspaper founded. 1882 First Telephone. 1885 Marina Beach Road formed. 1886 Indian National Congress Meet at Madras. Connemera Public Library founded. 1889 High Court Building foundation laid. 1894 First Car – Mr. A.J. Boag, Director of Parry&Co, drove the Car on City Roads. 1895 First Tram Car. 1899 First Tamil Newspaper-Swadesamitran. 1905 Port Trust formed. 1906 Indian Bank founded.
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King Institute, Guindy founded. 1914 Water mains and drainage formed. Street lights introduced. Kilpauk water works inaugurated. Endon bombardment- Endon German fighter Vessel bombarded the sea shore and disappeared - First World War. 1917 First Aeroplane; Simpson & Co., arranged for the trial flight. 1924 School of Indian Medicine. 1925 Loyola College First Bus Transport. 1930 First Broadcasting Station founded at Ripon Buildings Complex. 1934 First Mayor - Raja Sir. Muthiah Chettiyar 1938 All India Radio formed and broadcasting from Ripon Buildings ceased.
1942 Second World War - Evacuation of Madras. 1943 Japanese Fighter Plane dropped bombs on City and disappeared. 1946 Mambalam, Saidapet, Govt. Farm, Puliyur, Kodambakkam, Saligramam, Adayar and Alandur Villages which formed part of Saidapet Municipality were annexed to the city.
Sembiyam, Siruvallur, Peravallur, Small Sembarambakkam and Ayanavaram which formed part of Sembium Panchayat Board were annexed to the city. Aminjikarai, Periyakudal, Maduvankarai Villages which formed part of Aminjikarai Panchayat Board were annexed. Part of Velacheri Village belonging to Velacheri Panchayat Board was also annexed to the city.
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1947 Indian National Flag Hoisted over Fort. St. George. 1952 Nehru Stadium. 1956 Gandhi Mandap. 1959 Guindy Children’s Park. 1969 World Tamil Congress. 1971 Snake Park. 1972 Madras Metropolitan Development Authority. 1973 Madras Corporation Superceded. 1974 Rajaji Mandap. Madras Television Centre. 1975 Kamaraj Mandap. Valluvar Kottam. 1976 New Light House. 1977 Madras Metropolitan Water supply and Sewage Board Kanagam, Taramani, Thiruvanmiyur, Velacheri, Kodambakkam, Virugambakkam, Saligramam, Koyambedu, Thirumangalam, Villivakkam, Errukancheri, Kolathur, Kodungaiyur Panchayat areas annexed to the City; Madras reaches the present stage. 1983 Zoo shifted to Vandalur. 1988 Periyar Science Park Birla Planetarium. Madras Corporation’s Tri-centenary. Decentralisation of Administration. 10 Circles formed.
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1. AREA AND POPULATION
1.1 AREA, POPULATION, LITERATES, SC’S, ST’S – SEXWISE
Name of Literates Sl..No. the Population Corporation
Persons Male Female Persons Male Female Area (sq.km) Area
1991 Chennai 174 3841396 1986278 1855118 2752341 1535351 1216990 Census
2001 Chennai 174 4343645 2219539 2124106 3336695 1799981 1536714 Census
2011
Census Chennai 476 4646732 2335844 2310888 3776276 1968079 1808197
POPULATION SC’S, ST’S – SEXWISE
Scheduled Castes Scheduled Tribes Name of
SL.
the
NO. Corpora
-tion
Male Male
Female Female
Persons Persons 1991 529712 271549 258163 7930 4087 3843 Census
2001 Chennai 598110 301835 296275 6728 3368 3360 Census
2011 779667 389001 390666 10061 5207 4854 Census Source: Census of India
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1.2.POPULATION BY BROAD INDUSTRIAL CATEGORIES OF WORKERS
(2001 Census)
Census-2011
Tamil Nadu Chennai District Industrial Category Sl. Persons % to Persons % to total total No workers workers
1. Total Main Workers 1619554 89.12 27942181 84.97
a) Cultivators 10210 0.56 4248457 12.92 b) Agricultural Labors c) Household Industry 10251 0.56 9606547 29.21 Manufacturing, Processing, Servicing and 29143 1.60 1364893 4.15 Repairs d) Other Workers
1569950 86.38 17664784
53.71
2 Marginal Workers 197743 10.88 4942500 15.02
Total Workers 1817297 - 32884681 -
Non Workers 2829435 - 39262349
Total Population 4646732 72147030 - Source: Census of India
33
1.3 POPULATION BY RELIGION (2001Census)
Percentage (%)
SL. Religion Persons in Persons in In the NO. Chennai Tamil Nadu District TamilNadu
District
1 Hindu 3573356 54985079 82.27 88.67
2 Muslim 379206 3470647 8.73 5.00
3 Christian 331261 3785060 7.63 6.10
4 Sikh 2470 9545 0.06 0.01
5 Buddhist 1891 5393 0.04 0.00
6 Jain 45611 83359 1.05 0.13
7 Other 1819 7252 0.04 0.01 Religions
8 Religions not 8031 59344 0.18 0.10 stated
Total 4343645 62405679 100.00 100.00 Population
Source: Census of India
1.4. POPULATION BY AGE GROUPS (2001 Census)
YEAR: 2015-16 Sl. Age Groups Persons in Persons in Percentage to total in No Districts Tamil Nadu District Tamil Nadu
1. 0-14 1,014,350 16,710,874 24.06 26.96
2. 15-59 2,850,178 39,758,463 67.62 64.15
3. 60 and above 350,826 5,507,400 8.32 8.89
Source: Census of India
34
1.5 POPULATION OF THE DISTRICT DECENNIAL GROWTH
Population Percentage Variation Since Region previous Census
2001-2011
Period 2001 2011 1991 –2001
Total 4343645 4646732 13.07 6.5
availability)
Rural - - - - (Subject to the period of of period the to (Subject Urban 4343645 4646732 13.07 6.5
Source: Census of India
1.6 SALIENT FEATURES OF 2001 AND 2011 CENSUS CHENNAI CORPORATION
Literacy rate Name
among SL. of the NO. Corpora tion males Male Female
Urban/Rural Urban/Rural (%) since 1981 in % in 1981 since
Population in % in Population (%)
Females per 1000 per 1000 Females
Density per Sq.Km. per Density
S.T.Population in % in S.T.Population
S.C. Population in % in S.C. Population Increase in population population in Increase
2001 Chennai 24963 957 13.07 100 81.09 72.34 13.77 0.16 Census 2011 Chennai 26553 950 6.5 100 84.25 78.25 16.78 0.22 Census Source: Census of India,
35
2. CLIMATE AND RAINFALL
2.1 MONTHLY RAINFALL DATA-SEASON WISE
(In Millimeters)
YEAR: 2016-17 Normal Actual % Deviation Period Rainfall Rainfall
1.South West Monsoon Period
June 2016 109.3 64.1 70.5
July 2016 59.6 108.6 -45.1
August 2016 51.7 147.9 -65
September 2016 275.3 118.5 132.3
Total 495.9 439.1 12.9
2.North East Monsoon
October 2016 28.8 266.5 -89.2
November 2016 66.1 367.8 -82
December 2016 247.2 155.6 58.9
Total 342.1 789.9 -56.7
3.Winter-Period
January 2017 4.5 22.1 -79.6
February 2017 0.0 14.6 -100
Total 4.5 36.7 -87.7
4.Hot-Weather Period
March 2017 0.0 3.0 -100
April 2017 0.0 12 -100
May 2017 1.8 43.5 -45.9
Total 1.8 58.5 -96.9
Whole Year 844.3 1324.2 -36.2
Source: Deputy Director General of Meteorology, Chennai.
36
2.2 SEASON WISE RAINFALL
2016-17 Period Actual Normal Deviation
South west Monsoon Period June –September 495.9 439.1 12.9
North East Monsoon 342.1 789.9 -56.7 October – December
Winter period 4.5 36.7 -27.7 January – February
Hot Weather Period 1.8 58.5 -95.9 March – May
Source: Deputy Director General of Meteorology, Chennai.
37
2.3 TIME SERIES DATA OF RAINFALL BY SEASONS (LAST 14 YEARS) In mm
SWMS NEMS WINTER HOT WEATHER ANNUAL RAINFALL
YEAR
% Variation %
Normal Actual Deviation Variation % Normal Actual Deviation Variation % Normal Actual Deviation Variation % Normal Actual Deviation Variation % Normal Actual Deviation 2003- 332 337 5 2 465 403 -62 -13 37 12 -26 -69 128 283 155 121 961.8 1035 7.6 8 04
2004- 332 361 29 9 465 472 8 2 37 14 -23 -62 128 232 103 80 961.8 1079 12.2 12 05
2005- 333 308 -25 -7 459 830 371 81 37 16 -21 -57 130 151 21 17 958.5 1306 36.1 36 06
2006- 316 251 -65 -21 431 498 66 15 35 11 -24 -69 129 100 -29 -22 911.6 860 -5.7 -6 07
2007- 316 342 26 8 431 515 84 20 35 47 11 32 129 261 132 102 911.6 1165 27.7 28 08
2008- 288 334 46 16 431 553 122 28 35.3 7.7 -28 -78 129 132 3 2 883.1 1026 142.5 16 09
2009- 316 317 1 0 431 483 52 12 35 12 -23 -66 129 127 -2 -2 912.0 938 26 2.9 10
2010- 319 384 64 20 430 605 175 41 31.3 36.3 5 16 128 140 12 10 908.6 1165 256.5 28.2 11
2011- 439.1 769.6 75.3 100.4 789.9 835.9 5.8 38.1 36.8 17.0 -53.8 -53.2 58.5 0.5 -99.1 -99.6 1324.3 1623 22.6 39.3 12
2012- 433.9 852.7 418.8 97.0 877.3 852.0 -25.3 -3.0 24.7 16.3 -8.4 -34.0 55.6 3.6 -52 -94.0 1391.5 1724.6 333.1 24.0 13
2013- 439.1 597.6 158.5 36.07 789.9 463.5 -326.4 -41.32 36.7 7.1 -29.6 -80.65 58.8 30.5 -28.3 -48.37 1324.5 1098.7 -225.8 -17.04 14
2014- 439.1 529.4 +90.3 +20.6 789.9 719.6 -70.3 -8.9 36.7 14 -22.7 -61.9 58.5 59.2 0.7 +1.2 1324.2 1322.2 -2.0 -0.2 15
2015- 439.1 369.9 -69.2 -15.8 789.9 1608.6 818.7 103.6 36.7 0.5 -36.2 -98.6 58.5 198.1 139.6 278.6 1324.2 2177.1 792.9 64.4 16
2016- 739.1 495.9 12.9 789.9 342.1 -56.7 36.7 4.5 -81.7 58.5 1.8 -96.9 1324.2 844.3 -36.2 17
SWMS- South West Monsoon , NEMS-North East Monsoon
38
2.4 Monthly Rainfall April 2016 to March 2017
Classification
Month Actual Normal % Deviation of Rainfall
June 2016 109.3 64.1 70.5 Excess
July 2016 59.6 108.6 -45.1 Deficient
August 2016 51.7 147.9 -65 Scanty
September 275.3 118.5 132.3 Excess 2016
October 2016 28.8 266.5 -89.2 Scanty
November 2016 66.1 367.8 -82 Scanty
December2016 247.2 155.6 58.9 Excess
January 2017 4.5 22.1 -79.6 Scanty
February 2017 0.0 14.6 -100 No Rain
March 2017 0.0 3.0 -100 No Rain
April 2017 0.0 12 -100 No Rain
May 2017 1.8 43.5 -45.9 Deficient
Source India meteorological Department, Chennai-6.
Excess – 20% and above
Normal – 19% to -19%
Deficient - 20% to 59%
Scanty – 60% to 99%No Rain – 100%
39
5.ANIMAL HUSBANDARY 5.1 Livestock Population (As per 19th Livestock Census 2012) SL. Classification Numbers No. 1 Cattle 1.Male I Up to 1.5 years for Exotic / 561 Crossbred cattle & up to 2 years for Indigenous cattle II Over 1.5 years for Exotic / 1070 Crossbred Cattle & over 2 years for Indigenous cattle
2.Female I Under one year 444 II 1 to 2.5 years for Exotic / 515 Crossbred cattle & 1 to 3 years for Indigenous cattle III over 2.5 years for Exotic / Crossbred cattle & over 3 years for indigenous cattle a. In milk 3092 b.Dry 356 c. Not calved even once 89 d. Others 128 Cattle Total 6254 2Bullocks Total 435 3 Sheep 104 4 Goats 4607 5 Horses and Ponies 620 6 Pigs 0 7 Mules 0 8 Camels 0 9 Donkeys 9 10 Domestic Dogs 1277 TOTAL LIVESTOCK 12871 II. Poultry 1. Fowls 18055 2. Ducks 566 3. Turkeys 255 4. Quails 153 5. Other Poultry Birds 18029 Total Backyard Poultry 37058 Total Farm Poultry 831 Total Poultry 37889
Source: Director of Animal Husbandry
40
Table 5.1 Concluded.
No. Classification Number 1. Live – Stock Cattle Exotic 4645 Cattle Indigenous 1609 Buffaloes 1277 Sheep 104 Goats 4607 Horses 620 Donkeys 9 Pigs 0 Camel 0 Total 12871 Dogs 33974 Rabbits 796 Poultry 37889
5.2 VETERINARY INSTITUTIONS AND ANIMALS TREATED
Year: 2016-17
Veterinary Institutions Other Units
clinic
-
centers
-
Castration
performed
Animals treatedAnimals
Sl.No. of Name the District. Poly Hospitals Dispensaries Clinic) Pet Clinician Centers Animal disease investigation unit units Mobile Sub
1 Chennai 1 1 1 -- 4 1 1 95993 336 Source: Asst. Director of Animal Husbandry,Chennai-35.
5.3. NUMBER OF VETERINARY HOSPITALS
Year: 2016-17
SL. Name of the Number of NO. District Government Hospitals Private Hospitals 1 Chennai 2 NA
Source:Asst .Director of Animal HusbandryChennai-35.
41
5.4 DAIRY DEVELOPMENT Year: 2015-16
Quantity of Value of Name of the Name and address of Item milk milk District/Urban milk societies supplied (In Supplied Town Lac) per day (In Rs.) Lac (1) (2) (3) (4) (5)
TM 5.23 193.51
FCM 1.43 64.35
SM 4.20 172.20
Dairy Development, Chennai Chennai -- SM- -- BVM
DTM 0.05 1.70
10.91 431.76 TOTAL Source: Tamil Nadu Co-Operative Milk Producer’s Federation Ltd., Chennai-51
5.5 POULTRY DEVELOPMENT Year :2016-17
SL. Name of the Place Broiler (No’s) Layer (No’s) NO. Poultry Research Station, Madhavaram Milk Colony, Chennai- 600 051 (Previously 1981 1828
known as Institute of Poultry production and Management)
Poultry Production NO.of birds as SL. Species Egg Meat on 31.3.2017 NO. Production Production (No’s) (kg.) 1. Chiken 202126 85 3809 1. Japanese Quail 309468 17 4518 2. Turkey 6362 4.5 81 3. Guinea Fowl 9412 29.75 246 4. Fancy 2064 0 135 Total 529432 136.25 8789 Source: Institute of Poultry Production And Management.
42
5.6 FISHERIES DEVELOPMENT AND PRODUCTION (P)
Year:2016-17 Name and Address Inland Fish Marine Fish Number of of Fishing centers Catch (Tonne) Catch (Tonne) Fisherman engaged Chennai -- 28941.53 33949 District Total -- 28941.53 33949 Source: Fisheries Department.
5.7 Slaughter House 2016-17
Cattles& Buffalos Goats Sheep
No. of
Sl. Slaughter No.
Houses
Meat Meat Meat
(inkg) (inkg) (inkg)
Production Production Production
Slaughtered Slaughtered Slaughtered
1 4 N.A N.A 17765 142120 31330 313306
Source: Corporation of Chennai, Chennai-3
6. BANKING AND INSURANCE 6.1 Commercial Banks Year: 2016-17
Items Deposits Advances Credit Deposit Ratio (In (In (in %) Rs.million.) Rs.million. ) 3055642 104.1 1) Nationalized Bank 2934134
1238117 1341062 108.3 2) SBI & ASSOCIATES
282118 416836 147.8 3) Foreign Banks
88654 77149 87.0 4) Regional Rural Banks
2168214 2223659 102.6 5) Private Sector Banks
43
6327 42905 678.1 6) Small Finance Banks
6717564 7157254 106.5 7)All Scheduled Commercial Banks
Source: Reserve Bank of India, Chennai.
6.2 INSURANCE SCHEME
Year: 2016-17 Amount Sum Name of the No. of Policies No. of paid as Assured Insurance Branches Issued Beneficiaries compensati (Crores) on (Lac) (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) 35 250738 755.05 301296 192630 1.L.I.C.Chennai District 2.General Insurance 3. Other 1 27 1107 13612 309 Connected Schemes (Social Security Schemes) Source: Life Insurance Corporation of India.
44
7. CO-OPERATION 7.1 Co-operative Societies Year:2016-17 (Rs. in Lakhs)
Type of No. of Member Share Working Loans Out No. of Over due Societies Societies ship Capital capital Advanced standing Employee
Employees Co- operative 210 137273 44067.00 239140.00 13862.00 416346.00 4332.00 268 Societies
Urban Co- 15 92897 260.50 9832.83 8178.56 626.04 629.29 68 operative Societies
Urban Co- operative Bank / 8 300430 5492.56 90883.31 5473.73 55408.64 2263.14 248 Employees Co- operative Bank
Chennai Central 1 496 19080.22 403787.35 135314.52 167922.86 4800.40 358 Co- operative Bank
TNSARD 1 180 4037.12 100071.26 67633.78 68033.54 14352.73 117 Bank
T.N.S. Apex Co- 1 24 31203.00 1651469.00 507967.44 558997.00 1863.91 360 operative Bank
236 531300 104140.4 2495183.75 738430.03 1267334.08 28241.47 1419 Total
Source: Addl. Registrar of Co-operative Societies, Chennai Region, Chennai-18
45
8. CIVIL SUPPLIES 8.1 Fair Price Shops Year: 2015-16 No. of Shops T.N.C.S.C Co - Women Mobile Total Ltd. Operative FPS/Others Shops
Name of the
Sl.No. Corporation/
Division
Full Time Full Part Time Time Full Part Time Time Full Part Time Time Full Part Time Time Full Part Time 1 Chennai North 321 0 607 9 10 0 0 0 938 9
2 Chennai 148 0 659 2 1 0 0 0 808 2 South Total 469 0 1266 11 11 0 0 0 1746 11 Source: Civil Supplies Department
8.2 QUANTUM OF ESSENTIAL COMMODITIES DISTRTIBUTED AND THEIR RETAIL PRICES
Year:2015-16
Sl.No Name of the Issue Price per Scale of Supply Commodity (Kg.) 1. Rice Free of Cost (As 4 Kgs per adult and 2 Kgs per child per per Hon’ble Chief month, subject to a minimum of 12 Kgs Minister’s and maximum of 20 kgs., per month per Announcement card. Under AAY 35 Kg per family. w.e.f.01.06.2011) 2. Wheat Rs.7.50 per Kg. 10 Kgs. Per card per month.
. Sugar Rs.13.50 per Kg 500 grams per head per month subject to a maximum of 2 kgs per month. Additional 3 kgs are supplied to sugar option card holders in lieu of rice. 4. Kerosene Rs.13.50 Ranges from 3-10 litres per card depending upon the location and possession of LPG cylinders. 5. Toordhall Rs.30/- Per Kg. 1 Kg per card
6 Uriddhall Rs.30/- Per Kg. 1 Kg per card
7 PalmoleinOlil Rs.25/- Per Kg. 1 litre per card
Source: Commissioner of Civil Supplies and Consumer Protection, Chennai-6
46
8.3 NO. OF RATION CARDS (URBAN)
Year: 2015-16 REGION DETAILS NO. OF RATION CARDS
Rice card/Sugar/Police Chennai- North 11,57,775 card/None card
Rice card/Sugar/Police Chennai-South 10,33,065 card/None card
Source: Commissioner of Civil Supplies and Consumer Protection, Chennai-5.
8.4 QUANTITY SUPPLIED (Off take)
Year: 2015-16 Quantity (Allottment and Supplied) SL. Items Chennai North Chennai South Total NO. Allottment Off-take Allottment Off-take Allottment Off-take
1. Rice M.T 234657 141882 189220 112265 423877 254147
2. Wheat M.T 11400 9128 9970 7552 21370 16680
3. Sugar M.T 27276 25879 26327 25046 53603 50925
Kerosene(Kil 4. 20307 17776 15542 13367 35849 31143 o liter)
5. Palmolin Oil 10800 10683 9600 9491 20400 20174
Anna yojana 6. 4862 3266 3265 2154 8127 5420 scheme
Others 7. (Specified 9444 9172 8724 8449 18168 17621 )TurDhall
8. UradDhall 7440 6609 6240 5404 13680 12013
Note: Off take decreased due to implementation of coupon system. Source: Commissioner of Civil Supplies and Consumer Protection, Chennai-5
47
8.5 NO. OF L..P.G. CONNECTIONS
Year:As on 31st March 2017
Name of the Government Private L.P.G. District L.P.G.Connections Connections SL. NO. Single Double Single Double
Chennai 4212 1868 1133335 2005183
Source: Indian Oil Corporation Ltd.,Tenampet
8.6 NO. OF PERSONS WAITING FOR L.P.G. CONNECTIONS
Year: 2016-17
SL. Name of the Government Private L.P.G. NO. Corporation L.P.G.Connections Connections
Single Double Single Double
Chennai Nil Nil Nil Nil
Source: Indian Oil Corporation Ltd.,
9. COMMUNICATIONS
9.1 Post Offices doing postal business only
Year: 2016-17
SL. ITEM NUMBERS NO.
1. Post Office doing postal business only 77
2. Total No. of Letter boxes 341
Source: District Head Post Office.
48
9.2 POST OFFICE DOING POST AND TELEGRAPHIC BUSINESS
Year: 2016-17
SL. Post Office doing Post and Name of the CORPORATION NO. Telegraphic business(Nos.)
1 CHENNAI Nil
District Total Nil
Source: District Head Post Office.
9.3 TELEGRAPH OFFICE
Year: 2016-17
SL. No. of Telegraph No. of customer Name of the Corporation NO. Office service centers
1 Chennai -- 41
District Total -- 41
Source: District Telecommunication Department.
9.4 NO. OF TELEPHONE EXCHANGES, CAPACITY AND NOT IN USE
Year:2016-17 SL. No. Item Numbers
1. Number of Telephone Exchanges 330
2. Number of Equipped Capacity 1231500
3. Number of Direct Exchange lines 639666
4. Number of Junction Lines --
5. Number of Telephones in use 639666
6. No. of persons waiting for new Telephone Nil Corrections
Source: District Telecommunication Office
49
9.5 NO. OF PUBLIC CALL OFFICES ATTACHED TO EACH EXCHANGE
Year:2016-17
SL. Name of the No. of Public Call Offices NO. Exchange Centre With STD/ISD Without STD/ISD
1. Chennai 3131 7532
Source: District Telecommunication Office.
9.6 NO. OF PERSONS WAITING FOR PHONE CONNECTION
Year: 2016-17
SL. Name of the Exchange Centers No. of persons waiting for NO. phone connections
1. Chennai Nil
Source: District Telecommunication Office.
10. ELECTRICITY
10.1 No. of Power Stations
Year: 2016-17 .
SL. Name of Year of Installed Generation Station NO. the Power Operation Capacity (M.U.) Consumption Stations (M.W.) (M.U.) THERMAL 1. ETPS 2. NCTPS Pertains to Thermal Power Station 3. Gas Turbine a)BasinBrid ge Source: Tamil nadu generation and distribution corporation LTD, Chennai-2
50
10.2 QUANTUM OF POWER PURCHASED
Year: 2016-17
Power Purchased in M.U Power purchased sectors name Name of Circle CEDC/ CEDC/ CEDC Central North / West
1) M/s. High Tech Carbon Pvt. Ltd. 157.95
Nil Nil 2) M/s. OPG Ltd 1065.037
Total 1222.987
Source:: Tamil Nadu generation and distribution corporation LTD, Chennai-2
10.3 Power Consumption Sector wise
Year:2016-17
SL. Consumption % of the Sectors NO. (M.U) Consumption
1. Industries 1121.27 11.13
2. Agriculture 2.95 0.03
3. Domestic 5375.43 53.36
4. Commercial 3061.48 30.39
5. Public lighting and Public 119.15 1.18 Works
6. Sales to licensees 0 0
7. Sales to other States 0 0
8. Miscellaneous 393.61 3.91
Total 10073.89
Source: Tamil Nadu generation and distribution corporation LTD, Chennai-2
51
10.4 Peak Demand and Energy Output
Year:2016-17
Power Demand Details
1. Maximum demand reached 3101 MW, Date:19.08.2016 @ 23.00 Hrs
2. Maximum consumption reached 58.81 MU/Date:19.08.2016
Source: Tamil Nadu generation and distribution corporation LTD, Chennai-2
10.5 Revenue from Electric Schemes and cost per unit
Year:2016-17
Sectors Cost per unit in Rs. Income in Rs.in ‘000’
1. Government 6.62 1880075199
2. Public 7.33 491421044
3. Private 5.23 37034215346
Total 19.18 39405711589
Source: Tamil nadu generation and distribution corporation LTD, Chennai-2
52
10.6 Transmission and Distribution of Electricity
Year:2016-17
Sl, Name of the Voltage/rati Type of Name of Capaci Date of No substation o in KV SS circle ty in commissi MVA oning 230KV Substations 1 R.A. Puram 230/33 GIS CEDC / 2x100 29.03.2017 Central 2 Ambattur 230/110 Out Door CEDC/West 2x100 30.03.2017 (AIS) 110 KV Subsstations 1 Thervoykandiga 110//33-11 Out Door CEDC North 1x25 15.04.2016 i +1x16 2 Thirumangalam 110//33-11 Indoor CEDC / West 1x16 30.06.2016 3 Thiruvallur 110/11 Out Door CEDC / West 1 X 16 31.03.2017 33 KV Substations 1 Ammayappan 33/11 Indoor CEDC / 1X8 09.06.2016 Central 2 Anna Nagar 6th 33/11 Indoor CEDC / West 1X16 21.07.2016 Avenue SS 3 Thirumangalm 33/11 GIS CEDC / West 1x16 20.08.2016 south SS 4 Loyola College 33/11 Indoor CEDC/ West 1x16 05.10.2016 SS Source: Tamil nadu generation and distribution corporation LTD, Chennai-2
10.7 Name and address of fault report offices
Year: 2016-17
SL. Name of the Name of the Stations/Sub NO. No. of fault reported Corporation Stations
1 Chennai CEDC / Central 1135
2 CEDC / North 249
3 CEDC / West 669
Total 2053
Source: Tamil Nadu generation and distribution corporation LTD, Chennai-2 53
11. Education 11.1 Universities, Students, Teaching Faculty and Courses offered Year: 2016-17
SL. Students Teaching No. of the NO. Name of the Faculty courses University / No. of Boys Girls Total Institutions offered
MadrasUniversity 1. 1836 2034 3870 354 5 (1)
2. Anna University 31 UG 78 1873 1278 3151 PG 7(M.Phil) 1095 1013 2108 520 Ph.D Ph.D. & 232 234 466 M.S.(Engg. & Tech) 3. Dr. M.G.R. Medical University (1) 12 22 34 9 3
4. T.N.Veterinary & AnimalScienceUniv 995 765 1760 439 7 ersity
5. AmbedkarLawUniv ersity 5890 4459 10349 82 9
Source: Registrar of Respective University.
11.2 COLLEGES FOR GENERAL EDUCATION, STUDENTS ANDTEACHING FACULTY Year: 2015-16 SL. Name of No. of Students Teaching NO. Institution Institution Boys Girls Total Faculty 1. Government 9 2454 4560 7014 1164 Colleges (Arts & Science ) 2. Aided Colleges 22 4381 5498 9879 1092 (Arts & Science)
3. Self Financed 16 2461 8807 11268 453 Colleges (Provisional) Total 47 9296 18865 28161 2709 Source: Joint Director of Collegiate Education, Chennai Region, Chennai-15.
54
11.3 COLLEGE FOR PROFESSIONAL EDUCATION, STUDENTS ANDTEACHING FACULTY Year: 2016-17
SL. Name of the No. of Students Teaching NO. Institutions Institutions Boys Girls Total Faculty ENGG. COLLEGES 1 Govt. Engg. 13 19094 8393 27487 Colleges 2 Govt. Aided Engg. 3 3509 1235 4744 Colleges 2093 3 Self FinancingEngg. 577 675031 237351 912382 Colleges Total 593 697634 246979 944613 POLYTECHNIC COLLEGES 1 Govt. Polytechnic 9 1072 347 1419 -- Colleges 2 Govt. aided 2 486 19 505 -- 3 Self Financing 3 638 31 669 --
4 Hotel Management 4 11 2 13 --
Total 18 2207 399 2606 -- Source: Respective Head of Department.
11.4 COLLEGES FOR SPECIAL EDUCATION, STUDENTS ANDTEACHING FACULTY
Year: 2015-16 SL. Name of Institutions No. of Students Teaching NO. Institutions Boys Girls Total Facultys Colleges for 2 244 265 509 23 Education(Govt) 1. College of 4 24 573 597 44 Education(Aided) College of Physical 2. 1 75 23 98 11 Education (Aided) School of Social 3. 1 85 162 247 10 Work (Aided) TOTAL 8 428 1023 1451 88 Source: Director of College Education
55
11.5 SCHOOLS FOR GENERAL EDUCATION, STUDENTS AND TEACHERS
Year: 2015-16
Sl. No. of the Students Name of the Teachers No. Institutions Institutions Boys Girls Total
1. Primary 643 52866 51102 103968 5606 2. Middle 185 6260 5385 11645 847
3. High School Govt., 7 271 191 462 57 AdhiDravidar 4 77 166 243 15 Welfare Private( Aided ) 36 2085 1962 4047 163 Private ( Self 102 4435 4241 8676 692 Finance ) Corporation 38 2558 1841 4399 361 4. Higher Secondary Govt., 21 3189 5389 8578 391 AdhiDravidar 2 285 207 492 27 Welfare Private( Aided ) 120 18145 20367 38512 115 Private ( Self 292 29058 27823 56881 3544 Finance ) Corporation 32 5141 7900 13041 355 Source: SSA, Chennai District 11.6 SCHOOLS FOR PROFESSIONAL EDUCATION, STUDENTS ANDTEACHING FACULTY Year: 2015-16 SL Teaching Name of the No. of the Students .No Faculty Institution Institutions Boys Girls Total
1 NIIT (Training & 1 1955 860 2815 22 Research) Source: National Institute of Technical Teachers and Research Taramani, Chennai-600 113
56
11.7 SCHOOLS FOR SPECIAL EDUCATION, STUDENTS ANDTEACHING FACULTY Year: 2015-16
Teaching Students SL Name of the Faculty Course .No Institution
Boys Girls Total
69 Diploma 158 227
T.N Govt. Music Degree – 51 1 60 111 18 college B.A., 13 House Wife -- 13
T.N Govt. Fine 1 434 72 506 23 2 Arts college Source: Concerned Institution
11.8 INSTITUTIONS FOR OTHER PROFSSIONAL EDUCATION, STUDENTS AND TEACHING FACULTY
Year: 2015-16 Students Teaching SL. Name of the No. of Faculty NO. Institution Institutions Years Boys Girls Total
1 M.G.R Govt. Film I 64 5 69 and Television II 57 5 62 Institute. Chennai- 113 III 60 1 61 1 69
Total 181 11 192
Source: MGR Film & TV Institute, Taramani, Chennai-113
11.9 Computer Training Centers Year: 2015-16
Name of the District/Municipalities No. of Computer Training Centers
Chennai 45 Source: Concerned Centers
57
11.10 HOSTELS AND INMATES BY COMMUNITY Year: 2016-17 No. of Hostels Scheduled Scheduled Most Backward Backward Class Caste Tribe Class and Denotified
Communities
Girls Girls Girls Girls
Total Total Total Total
Boys Boys Boys Boys
12 9 21 0 1 1 378 213 591 459 272 731
Table 11.10 Concluded
No. of Inmates Scheduled Caste Scheduled Most Backward Class Backward Class Tribe and Denotified
Communities
oys
Girls
Girls Girls Girls
Total Total Total Total
Boys Boys
Boys B Boys
2289 1180 3469 0 55 55 23120 13698 36816 25741 15214 40955 Source: Director of Adi-Dravidar and Tribal Welfare, and Backward Classes B. Boys G. Girls T. Total
11.11 SCHOLARSHIPS TO STUDENTS BY COMMUNITY Year: 2016-17 Scheduled Denotified Backward Classes Caste/Scheduled Tribe Communities/Most Backward Classes * No. of Amount. in No. of Amount No. of Amount beneficiaries ‘000’) Beneficiaries (Rs.in Beneficia (Rs.in) ( Including ‘000’) ries BCs)
S.C S.T S.C S.T
321472 8614.73 531037 13973.45
616
6259.67
27106 27475.13 * Break-up details for BC, MBC & DNC are not available. Source: Director of Adi-Dravidar and Tribal Welfare, and Backward Classes.
58
12. FISHERIES 12.1 FISHERIES DEVELOPMENT Year:2016-17 Sl.no Item Area a. Total Coastal Line of the District 19 Kms b. i Total Inland Fresh Water spread Area Nil 1. ii Estuaries and Brackish Water Area (in Hec.) 240 Hectares c. Marine Fishing Villages 44
12.2. Fish Production Year: 2016-17 Item Quantity (in tones) Value (in Lac.) (a) Marine 28941.53 62803 (b) Inland (through -- -- Brackish water area) Source: The Director of Fisheries, Chennai-6
12.3. INFRAS STRUCTURE IN PRIVAE SECTOR
Year:2016-17
a Freezing Plants --
b Ice plants, Cold storages --
walk in coolers --
c Sea food manufacturing --
Units in private sector --
d Fisheries Training centre: --
i. Marine --
ii Inland --
e Fishing Vessels 600 Mechanized f Active marine Fishermen 18918
g Active Marine 18826 Fisherwomen h Inland Fishermen --
4. Export ( ChennaiPort ) 39021 a Fish and Fish Production: Quantity (Tonne) Value (Rs.in crores) 1918.02
Source: Fisheries Department, Chennai-6
59
12.4 ESTIMATED MARINE FISH PRODUCTION / INLAND FISH PRODUCTION
Year:2016-17
SL. Quantity Value NO. Type (Tonne) (Rs. In Lac)
Marine 1. 28941.53 62803
2. Inland -- --
Source: Fisheries Department
12.5 NO. OF FAMILIES ENGAGED IN FISHING
Year: 2016-17
SL. Name of the District No. of Families engaged NO.
1 Chennai 11012
Source: Fisheries Department
60
13. HANDLOOM
13.1 NO. OF FOCAL CENTRES AND LOCATION DETAILS
Year: 2016-17 SL. No. of the Focal Centers Name/Location of the Focal NO. (2) Centers (1) (3)
1. Nil Nil
Source: Directorate of Economics & Statistics
13.2 NO. OF SOCIETIES & VARIETYWISE PRODUCTION
Year: 2016-17
Cotton Silk Art silk Mixture of Art Polyester
silk & Cotton
in in
No. No. of Societies Length Meter Value (Rs. In‘000’) Length in 23Meter Value (Rs. In`000’ Length in Meter Value (Rs. In‘000’) Length in Meter Value (Rs. I in “000’) Length in Meter Value (Rs. In ‘000’) in MeterVa Nil Source: Directorate of Economics and Statistics, Chennai-6.
13.3 NO. OF POWERLOOMS & EMPLOYEES WORKING Year: 2016-17 No. of Power looms No. of Employees working
Nil Nil Source: Directorate of Economics & Statistics, Chennai-6.
13.4 NO. OF FAMILIES ENGAGED Year: 2016-17
SlNo Name of the No. of the families engaged in District/Municipalities Handlooms Power looms
1. CHENNAI NIL NIL Source: Directorate of Economics & Statistics
61
14. HANDICRAFTS 14.1 NAME & ADDRESS OF HANDICRAFTS Year: 2016-17
SL. Name of the District/Municipalities Name & Address of the Handicraft NO.
Government Handicrafts Showroom 1. CHENNAI Poompuhar Sales Showroom 108, Anna Salai, Chennai 600 002. Production of Handloom cloth ( in 000 Meters) SL. Varity of cloth Production No. 1 Mixture of art Silk and Cotton Mixed ---- No ----- Source: The Tamil Nadu Handicrafts Development Corporation Ltd., Chennai-2
14.2 ARTICLES AVAILABLE IN HANDICRAFTS Year2016-17 SL. Name of the Articles available in the Handicrafts NO. Handicrafts
1. Poompuhar Sales Bronze icons, Brass Traditional Lamps, Stone Showroom, carvings, wood carvings, Tanjore Paintings, Gift 108, Anna Salai, Articles,Brass ware, Tanjore Art Plate & other Chennai -2 Handicrafts items. Source: The Tamil Nadu Handicrafts Development Corporation Ltd., Chennai-2
14.3 VALUE OF ARTICLES PRODUCED Year: 2016-17 SL. Name of the Value of the articles Value of the articles NO. Handicraft Provided sold
1. Poompukhar Sales Rs.2400.00 Lakhs Rs.1181.71 Lakhs Chennai Source: The Tamil Nadu Handicrafts Development Corporation Ltd., Chennai-2
14.4 NO. OF FAMILIES ENGAGED IN HANDICRAFTS Year: 2016-17
SL. Name of the No. of the Handicrafts No. of the families NO. Corporation engaged
1 Chennai 2000 No Production Unit
Source: The Tamil Nadu Handicrafts Development Corporation Ltd.,
62
15. HEALTH & FAMILY WELFARE 15.1 HOSPITALS, DISPENSARIES BED STRENGTH, DOCTORS AND NURSES
Year: 2016-17 Indian Medicine Grand Homoe Sl. Classification Modern Total Ayurvedic opathy No. Medicine Ayur- Siddha Unani Siddha Varm vedic Total Unani a
combined
1 19 Hospitals 1 1 1 1 -- 4 4 15 2 Dispensaries 4 1 9 ------10 -- -- 3 PrimaryHealth -- Centres/Mat. ------&Chld.Inst. 4 Health Sub ------Centers 5 Other Medical ------Institutions 6 Bed Strength 13664 55 120 100 -- -- 275 -- -- 7 Number of 112 1819 10 73 29 ------Doctors 8 Number of 29 3048 ------29 ------Nurses Source: Respective District Heads of Departments
15.2 NO. OF ALLIED PATHOLOGICAL UNITS AVAILABLE Year: 2016-17
SL. Name of the District No. of Pathological Units NO.
1. CHENNAI 14 Source: Director of Medical Service
15.3 DISEASE WISE PATIENTS TREATED Year: 2016-17
SL. Name of the No. of patients treated NO. Disease Modern Medicine Indian Medicine (2016-17)
Out Patients 1. 11375406 773794 Treated In Patients 2. 3594109 56370 Treated
14969515 830164 Total Source: Director of Medical Services and Superintendent .Arignar Anna Hospital, Chennai.
63
15.4 DISTRIBUTION OF MEDICAL PERSONNEL
Year: 2016-17
No. of Doctors No. of Nurses No. of Mat.Assts. Others Technical persons
1999 3089 1501 8 3132 Source: Director of Medical Education, Chennai.
15.5 PROGRESS OF FAMILY WELFARE PROGRAMMES
Year: 2016-17
Sterilization I.U.C.D Nature of SL. Target Preventive Achievement NO. Medicine Achievement Target Achiev Target ement
1 D.P.T 87674 82849 Male Female 2 POLIO 87674 82849 3 MEASELS 87674 71902 4 B.C.G 87674 79040 5 T.T(M) 95592 88584 6 D.T 82038 147029 34000 36 24488 45000 49440 7 T.T.( 10 ) 80787 76236 8 T.T (16) 79294 68572 F.S.T 9 95592 88347 LARGE
Source: District Family Welfare Office (Medical Services Dept. Greater Chennai Corporation)
64
16.HOUSING 16.1 PLAN SANCTIONED, BUILDING COMPLETED UNDER PRIVATE SECTOR Year: 2015-16
Sl.No. Name of the Town Room Unit Size Panchayat/Municipalities/ Private Corporation Up to 500 Above 500 Sector Sq.ft Sq.ft 1 Chennai Corporation N.A N.A 4667 Source: Directorate of Economics & Statistics
16.2 PLANS SANCTIONED, BUILDING COMPLETED UNDER PUBLIC SECTOR Year: 2015-16
Sl.No. Name of the Corporation Room Unit size Public Sector
1 Chennai Corporation NA 40
Source: Directorate of Economics & Statistics
16.3 AMOUNT INVESTED IN HOUSING AND BUILDING ACTIVITY UNDER PUBLICSECTOR Year: 2016-17
Residential Percentage Non-Residential Percentage to Total Rs.in ‘000’ to total Rs.in ‘000’ total Rs.in ‘000’
------
Source: Directorate of Economics & Statistics
65
16.4 CONSTRUCTION ACTIVITY OF TAMIL NADU HOUSING BOARD Year: 2015-16
Sl.No. Name of the Scheme Number
1. Construction of TNGRHS at Anna Nagar of 606 Western 606 Extension 2. Construction of 204 MSB flats at Indira Nagar 204 Total 810
Source: Tamil Nadu Housing Board Chennai-35
16.5 CONSTRUCTION ACTIVITY OF TAMIL NADU SLUM CLEARANCE BOARD
Year:2016-17 Sl.No. Item Achievement
1. Number of Tenements sanctioned for construction 21531
2. Number of Tenements constructed 3637
3. Amount sanctioned (Rs.in crore) 1046.87
4. Amount spent (Rs.in crore) 271.92
5. Number of tenements occupied 1827
6. Rent received (Rs.in Lac) 1005.44
Source: Tamil Nadu Slum Clearance Board Chennai-35
66
16.6 CONSTRUCTION ACTIVITY OF TAMIL NADU POLICE HOUSING CORPORATION LIMITED Year: 2016-17
Sl.No. Name of the Scheme Number
1. Police Quarters 1739 2. Police Stations 101 3 Bell of Arms 2 4 Modern Control Room 2 5 Dormitories 5 6 Barracks 3 7 District Police Office 2 8 Police Hospital 2 9 Administrative building 5 10 Security Perimeter wall and erection of watch tower 20 11 Pre fabricated barracks 1 12 DVAC 1 13 Others 92 Total 1975
Source: Chief Engr, TAMIL NADU POLICE HOUSING CORPORATION LIMITED, Kilpauk,
16.7 BUILDING CONSTRUCTIION COST INDEX IN URBAN CENTRES
(1999-00=100) Year: 2016-17 Sl. District Urban Building Index Construction Other Building No. Centers Building materials cost for Charges cost Index building Labour
1. CHENNAI 294.78 435.00 362.98 354.80 Source: Directorate of Economics & Statistics
67
16.8 LABOUR CHARGES OF CONSTRUCTION WORKERS
Year: 2015-16 Charges of Male Construction Charges of Female Workers Construction Workers Unskilled labour
Male Female 1) Masson Ist. Class Rs.450 250 210 190 2) Carpenter Ist. Class Rs.400 ------Source: Directorate of Economics & Statistics
17. INDUSTRIES 17.1 RESULTS OF ANNUAL SURVEY OF INDUSTRIES (FACTORY SECTOR)
Year :2012-2013 Results for all Industries Characteristics Units (Rupees In Lacs.)
Fixed Capital 374973 Value Of Output 2976086 All 1870 Value Of Input 2168400 Source: Directorate of Economics & Statistics
17.2 ESTIMATES OF OUTPUT AND VALUE ADDED BY MANUFACTURE BASED ON ANNUAL SURVEY OF INDUSTRIES Year: 2012-13 Industry Descriptio All Value of Value added Group n of the Employees output (Rs. In Lac) Industry Rs. In Lac
Gross Value Added-807685 All 1870 2976086 61943 Net Value Added-769844 Source: Directorate of Economics and Statistics, Chennai-6.
17.3 INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION Year: 2016-17 Sl. No. and Name of the Unit of quantity Production Product
----- NA ---- Source: Directorate of Economics and Statistics, Chennai-6.
68
17.4 PRODUCTION AND VALUE OF MAJOR MINERALS Year: 2016-17 Name of the Name of the Mineral Quality (Tonne) Value District (Rs.in ‘000’)
Nil .Source: Controller, Indian Bureau of Mines, Nagpur.
17.5 PRODUCTION OF HANDLOOM CLOTH („In 000‟ Meters) Year: 2016-17 SL. NO. Variety of Cloth Production (Mts)
1 Mixture of art silk and cotton mixed Nil Source: Directorate of Economics and Statistics, Chennai-6.00006
17.6 Micro, Small,Medium Enterprises Year: 2015-16 Sl. Classification Details of No. of Investment Employment No Classification Units (Plant & Machinery) (in lakhs) 1. All Group ---- 30467 342413 96164 Source: District Industries and Commerce Office.
17.7 KHADI AND VILLAGE INDUSTRIES Year: 2015-16
Sales (Rupees in Lakhs) Industry
1.Khadi 1348.74 2. Cotton -- 3. Ready made -- 4. Silk 739.45 5. Polyester 446.69 6. Wollen 39.25 7. Muslin -- TOTAL 2574.13 II Village Industries 2245.78 GRAND TOTAL 4819.91 Source: Tamil Nadu Khadi and Village Industries Board, Chennai 108
69
17.8 NO. OF PRINTING PRESSES Year: 2016-17
SL. NO. Name of the District / Municipality Number
1 Chennai Corporation 126 Source: Addl. Director, Industrial Safety and Health Office, Chennai-32
17.9 NO. OF PHOTOCOPY (XEROX) CENTRES Year: 2014-15 SL. NO. Name of the District / Municipality No. of Xerox Centers
5385 1 Chennai Corporation
18. FACTORIES 18.1 REGISTERED AND WORKING FACTORIES
Year: 2014-15 SL. NO. Item Division 2
1. Factories on the Register at the 144 beginning of the year 2. Factories added during the year 2 3. Factories removed during the 7 year 4. Factories on the register at the 139 end of the year 5. Number of working factories 90 Source: Joint Director, Industrial and Safety Health-II, Chennai-32
18.2 EMPLOYMENT IN WORKING FACTORIES Year: 2014-15 Sl. Item Numbers No. Div-2
1 All Group 90 Source: Joint Director, Industrial and Safety Health-II, Chennai-32
70
18.3 UNIONS: INDUSTRIAL DISPUTES BY STRIKES ANDLOCKOUTS GHERAOS Year:2016-17
SL. Items Number NO.
1. Number of Registered Trade Unions(during 2015) 188 2. Strike: a. Number of Strikes 9 b. Number of Workers Involved 1842
c. Number of Man days Lost 49721 3. Lockouts: a. Number of Lockouts 1
b. Number of workers involved 92 c. Number of Man days Lost 2870 4. Gheraos: a. Number Nil b. workers involved Nil c. man days Lost Nil Source: The Commissioner of Labour,Chennai-6
19. LOCAL BODIES
19.1 MUNICIPAL BODIES AREA AND POPULATION BY GRADES Year:2016-17
Sl.No Classification of Number Area Population Municipal Bodies (Sq.Km.)
1. Greater Chennai 1 476 66,72,103 Corporation Note: Area and Population are as per Census 2011 Source: Directorate of census Operation, Chennai, Commissioner, Corporation of Chennai.
19.2 MUNICIPAL BODIES BY TALUKS Year: 2016-17
Grade of Municipal Councils
Total
First
Third
Township
Second
Selection
Committees
SL.NO. Taluk Corporations Special
1 10 1 ------Not Applicable ----- 1 Source: Directorate of Economics and Statistics, Chennai-6.
71
19.3 PANCHAYAT UNIONS, VILLAGE PANCHAYATS/TOWN PANCHAYATS Year: 2016-17
SL. Village Panchayat/ Development Panchayat Village Town NO. Town Panchayat Districts Union Panchayats Panchayats
------Not Applicable ----- Source: District Rural Development Office.
19.4 REVENUE DIVISIONS, TALUKS, FIRKAS AND REVENUEVILLAGES
Year:2016-17
SL. Revenue Revenue Taluks Revenue Revenue Villages NO. Divisions Firkas
1 2 10 40 62 Source: District Revenue Administrative Office.
19.5 TAX COLLECTED BY CORPORATION / MUNICIPALITY / PANCHAYAT UNION / TOWN PANCHAYAT / VILLAGE PANCHAYAT
Year: 2016-17
Item Corporation Municipality Panchayat Town Village Union Panchayat Panchayat (Rs.in crores)
Not Applicable
Tax 695.45 collected
Source: Concerned Local Bodies
72
20. LABOUR AND EMPLOYMENT
20.1 NO. OF PERSONS REGISTERED DURING THE YEAR AND TOTAL NO. OF PERSONS WAITING UP TO THE END OF THE YEAR AS PER LIVE REGISTER
Year: 2015 - 16
SL. Type of Employment No. of Persons registered Total No. of persons NO. Exchange during the year waiting Up to the end of the year
Employment 1 69839 348975 Exchange
Source: District Employment Exchange.
20.2 No. of PLACEMENTS DURING AND UP TO THE END OF THE YEAR
Year: 2015-16
SL. Type of Employment Placements during the Placements up to NO. Exchanges year2015-2016 the year
2016
Employment 1 97 75 Exchange
Source: District Employment Exchange (G) , Santhome, Chennai - 4.
73
21. LEGAL SERVICES 21.1 JUDICIAL DIVISION AND ORIGINAL JURISDICTION Year:2014-15 SL. Item Number No.
I. CITY CIVIL COURT, CHENNAI - 600 104. 20 1. District Judges (Civil) 2. Assistant Judges, Civil Judges (In the cadre of Sub 19* Judge)
3. Judicial Magistrate (In the cadre of District Munsif) 1 (Registrar)
II. COURT OF SMALL CAUSES, CHENNAI – 104
1.District Judge 1
2.Sub Judges 10
3.District Munsif 8 (including 1 post of Registrar)
III. CHIEF METROPOLITAN MAGISTRATES COURTS, EGMORE, CHENNAI -8 (INCLUDING SAIDAPET AND GEORGE TOWN) 1. Chief Metropolitan Magistrate (In the cadre of 2 District Judges)
2. Sub Judges (Chief Metropolitan Magistrate) (Civil 1 Judges Senior Division)
3. Metropolitan Magistrate 6 (Civil Judges Senior Division) 4. Judicial Magistrates in the cadre of District Munsif 17 ** (Civil Judges Junior Division) (Railways) One at Madras Central and other one at Egmore.
5.Metro Magistrate F.T.C.at Magistrate Level 4
6.Special Metro Magistrate, 2 Special Court for exclusive Trial of land grabbing cases at Chennai
*including one post of special court for trail of cases under prevention of corruption act.
**including 2 railways magistrates.
Source: Assistant Registrar (A.S.),Small Causes,Madras High Court. 74
21.2 RESULTS OF CIVIL AND REVENUE CASES IN THE COURTS OF ORIGINAL JURISDICTION CIVIL SUITS REGULAR Year: 2014-15 Item Number
I. CITY CIVIL COURT, MADRAS
1. Pending at the beginning of the year 13633
2. Instituted during the year 7419
3. Revived during the year 156
4. Otherwise received during the year 334
TOTAL 21542
II. Available for disposals 21542
III. Number of suits disposed of :-
1. By transfer 98
2. Without trial:-
i. Under order IX Rule 3 & 8 of CPC 1127 when defendants does not admit claim
ii. Otherwise 2507
3. Exparte 2178
4. On admission of claims 37
5. Compromised 121
6. On Reference for arbitration 44
7. After full trial :-
i. Judgment for plaintiffs 1351
ii. Judgment for defendants 784
Total disposed of 8247
IV. Pending at the end of the year 13295
V. Pending more than one year 8119
Source: Assistant Registrar (A.S.), Small Causes Madras High Court.
75
21.3 RESULTS OF CIVIL AND REVENUE CASES IN THE COURTS OF ORIGINAL JURISDICTION CIVIL SUITS REGULAR (MADRAS)
II. Court of Small Causes, Chennai - 600 104 Year: 2016-17 Item Number
I. Number of Suits before the Courts :-
1. Pending at the beginning of the year 19
2. Instituted during the year Nil
3. Revived during the year --
4. Otherwise received during the year --
TOTAL 19
II. Available for disposals 19
III. Number of suits disposed of :-
1. By transfer --
2. Without trial:- --
i. Under order IX Rule 3 & 8 of CPC when defendants does not admit claim
ii. Otherwise --
3. Exparte 1
4. On admission of claims --
5. Compromised --
6. On Reference for arbitration --
7. After full trial :-
i. Judgment for plaintiffs --
ii. Judgment for defendants --
Total disposed of 1
IV. Pending at the end of the year 18
V. Pending more than one year 18
76
III. Court of Small Causes, Chennai - 600 104 Year: 2016-17 Item Number
I. Number of Suits before the Courts :-
1. Pending at the beginning of the year 8
2. Instituted during the year 1
3. Revived during the year --
4. Otherwise received during the year --
TOTAL 9
II. Available for disposals 9
III. Number of suits disposed of :-
1. By transfer --
2. Without trial:-
i. Under order IX Rule 3 & 8 of CPC when -- defendants does not admit claim
ii. Otherwise --
3. Exparte --
4. On admission of claims --
5. Compromised 2
6. On Reference for arbitration --
7. After full trial :-
i. Judgment for plaintiffs --
ii. Judgment for defendants --
Total disposed of 2
IV. Pending at the end of the year 7
V. Pending more than one year 7
77
IV S.C Court of Small Causes, Chennai - 600 104 Year: 2016-17 Item Number
I. Number of Suits before the Courts :-
1. Pending at the beginning of the year 33
2. Instituted during the year --
3. Revived during the year --
4. Otherwise received during the year --
TOTAL 33
II. Available for disposals 33
III. Number of suits disposed of :-
1. By transfer --
2. Without trial:-
i. Under order IX Rule 3 & 8 of CPC when -- defendants does not admit claim
ii. Otherwise --
3. Exparte --
4. On admission of claims --
5. Compromised --
6. On Reference for arbitration --
7. After full trial :-
i. Judgment for plaintiffs --
ii. Judgment for defendants --
Total disposed of --
IV. Pending at the end of the year 33
V. Pending more than one year 33
78
IX. Court of Small Causes, Chennai - 600 104 Year: 2016-17 Item Number
I. Number of Suits before the Courts :-
1. Pending at the beginning of the year 70
2. Instituted during the year 22
3. Revived during the year 6
4. Otherwise received during the year --
TOTAL 98
II. Available for disposals 98
III. Number of suits disposed of :-
1. By transfer --
2. Without trial:-
i. Under order IX Rule 3 & 8 of CPC when -- defendants does not admit claim
ii. Otherwise 34
3. Exparte 8
4. On admission of claims --
5. Compromised 3
6. On Reference for arbitration --
7. After full trial :-
i. Judgment for plaintiffs 8
ii. Judgment for defendants --
Total disposed of 53
IV. Pending at the end of the year 45
V. Pending more than one year 8
Source: Assistant Registrar (A.S.), Small Causes Madras High Court.
79
21.4 RESULTS OF CIVIL AND REVENUE CASES IN THE COURTS OF ORIGINAL JURISDICTION CIVIL SUITS / CRIMINAL REGULAR
III. CHIEF METROPOLITAN MAGISTRATES COURTS, EGMORE, CHENNAI - 600 008 (INCLUDING SAIDAPET AND GEORGE TOWN)
Year: 2014-15
Pending Pending from Instituted Total for Disposed of during the the Last Year during the year disposal year
62609 149493 212102 168446 43656
21.5.NATURE OF FREE LEGAL AVAILABLE AND NO. OF BENEFICIARIES, NO. OF CASES DISPOSED OFF IN LOK ADALAT DURING THE YEAR Year: 2016-17
Nature of free legal available No. of Beneficiaries No. of cases disposed off in LokAdalat
1. Civil Proceedings 618 5723
2. Criminal Proceedings 662 850196
3. Vehicle accident 15 3346
4. Bail applications 773 1148
5. Matrimonial 85 16
6.Others 25 94859
Source: Assistant Registrar (A.S.), Small Causes Madras High Court.
21.6 NO. OF ADVOCATES PRACTICING IN COURTS
Year: 2016-17
Sl.No. Name of the Court No. of Advocates Practicing
1. Madras High Court 6186 (For Chennai District) Source: The Secretary Bar Council of Tamil Nadu
80
22. LIBRARIES
22.1. List of Head and Branch Libraries in the district all the details of Members, Books available and Readers.
Year: 2016-17
Place/Name of the Members No. of Books No. of Number of Head/Branch (Nos.) available Periodicals Readers available
1) Branch Library 361834 6127940 6614890 4484121
Daily – 20 2) District Central 60669 498616 844 Library,Devaneyappavanar Periodicals - 130
3).Kannimera library N.A N.A N.A N.A
Manuscripts Books
4) Govt. KeelthisaiSuvadigal N.A N.A N.A N.A Library and ResearchCenter
Source: District Head Library Office – Mobile Units have been surrendered to govt.
22.2. Number of Libraries housed in Government Building/Rental Building.
Year: 2016-17
Libraries in GovernmentBuilding Libraries in RentalBuilding in (Nos.) (in Nos.) 1) Own building 92 2) Free buildings given by Chennai Corporation and 58 9 others 3) Mobile Library Nil Source: District Head Library Office.
81
22.3. Number of Reading Rooms
Year: 2016-17
Sl. Name of the Name and Place of Number of Reading No. District Libraries Room
1 CHENNAI 159 159
Source: District Head Libraries.
24. MANUFACTURING SECTOR
24.1 Number of Food and allied manufacturing units in the district
Year: 2016-17
Industry Name of the Description All employees Value of Value Group Corporation of the output Rs. added industry In Lac (Rs. In Lac)
------
Source: Directorate of Economics and Statistics.
24.2. Number of Non-Food Manufacturing units in the District
Year: 2016-17
Industry Name of the Description All Value of Value Group Corporation of the Employees output Rs. In added Industry Lac
------
Source: Directorate of Economics and Statistics.
82
25. MEDICAL SERVICES
25.1. Number of Medical Colleges in the District with Students and
Teaching Faculty
Year: 2016-17 Sl. Name of the Students Teaching No. Institution Boys Girls Total Faculty
1. MadrasMedicalCollege 1269 1156 2425 570
2. Stanly MedicalCollege 869 735 1604 411
3. KilpaukMedicalCollege 446 464 910 389
4 Govt. Medical College 114 86 200 123 Omandurar Govt. Estate
Total 2698 2441 5139 1493
1. Govt. Dental college 116 296 412 84
Source: Director of Medical Education.
25.2. Number of College of Pharmacy with Students and Teaching Faculty
Year: 2016-17
Sl. No. of Students Teaching Name of the Institution Institution No. Boys Girls Total Faculty
1 Madras Medical College 1 158 175 333 9
2 Private Pharmacy college N.A N.A N.A N.A N.A
Private Pharmacy college N.A N.A N.A N.A N.A 3 Diploma course
Source: Director of Medical Education.
83
25.3. Number of Medical Stores in the District (Category-wise)
Year: 2015-16
SL. Item NO. Number of Medical Stores
1. Indian Medicine 15
Wholesaler 2541
Retailer 3674
2. English Medicine Restricted 303
Homeopathy 66
Total 6584
Source: Director of Medical Education.
25.4 No. of Veterinary Colleges with Students and Teaching Faculty
Year: 2016-17
SL. Students Teaching Name of the Institution NO. Boys Girls Total Faculty
Veterinary College and Research Centre, 433 303 736 166 1 Chennai-7
Source: TamilNaduVeterinaryCollege Chennai--7.
84
26. MOTOR VEHICLES
26.1 No. of Motor Vehicles (Category-wise) on road Up to the end of the year Year:2016-17 Commercial Vehicles
Stage Carriage Auto Ordinary Taxi Motor Cab Maxi cab Rickshaw Public Private
7517 6 78352 561 31431 19949
Omni Private School Ambulance Fire Light Articulated Buses Service Bus Fighter Commercial Vehicle Vehicle Vehicle and others
165 1677 2930 1847 116 49237 2784
Lorry Tractor / Total Commercial Vehicles State National Trailer Permit Permit
31701 6675 1654 236602
Non Commercial Vehicles
Tri-Cycle Motor Cycle Scooter Moped Motor Car Jeep Auto
2616347 700547 682460 2795 798428 9863
Three Four Road Station Wagon Tractor Others Wheeler Wheeler Rollers
-- 4629 8599 2587 222 10225
85
Table 26.1 Concluded
Total Non- Total Commercial Total Non-Commercial Grand Total Commercial Vehicles Vehicles Vehicles (Commercial + Non- Commercial )
4836702 236602 4836702 5073304
Source: State Transport Department, Chennai.6
26.2 NO. OF MOTOR VEHICLES (CATEGORY WISE) REGISTERED DURING THE YEAR
Year:2016-17 SL. NO. Category During the year
Commercial Vehicles
1 Ambulance 118
2 Auto - Rickshaw 8232
3 Motor Cab 9784
4 Maxi Cab 2444
5 Omni Bus 133
6 LMV Omni Bus 2
7 School Bus 155
8 PSV 160
86
9 NCP 3719
10 LMV G. Vehicle 579
11 MMV G. Vehicle 564
12 HMV G. Vehicle 606
13 Articulated Vehicle 507
14 Stage Carriage 139
15 Mini Bus 0
16 Power Trailor 0
17 Fire Fighter 4
18 Tractor 6
19 Trailor 10
Total 27162
Non- Commercial Vehicles
1 Motor Cycle 180686
2 Scooter 69700
3 Moped 7402
4 Motor Car 58225
5 Jeep 37
87
6 Station Wagon 0
7 Tricycle Auto 0
8 Three Wheeler 47
9 Four Wheelers 0
10 Road Rollers 4
11 Tractor 24
12 Trailer 6
13 Others 298
Total Non-Commercial Vehicles 316429
Source: State Transport Department, Chennai.6
26.3NO. OF PERSONS ISSUED WITH DRIVING LICENCE
Year:2015-16
SL. NO. Category No. of Driving License issued
Fresh 161138 1 CHENNAI Renewal 147784
Total 308922
Source: State Transport Department, Chennai.6
88
27. NON-CONVENTIONAL ENERGY GENERATION
27.1 NO. OF SOLAR ENERGY GENERATING UNITS IN THE DISTRICT WITH PRODUCTION DATA
Year: 2016-17
SL. NO. Name and Place of Solar Instal Capacity Generation energy system exist (in Mega Watts) (in Mega Watts)
Tamil Nadu Energy 1 4 KW (0.004) MW Unit Development
M.S. Swaminathan, 2 1 X 10 KW 5KVA Units Research foundation *
* One Unit was removed due to high expenditure involved in maintenance, particularly batteries and inverters. Second Unit Generates 5KVA of Electricity.
Source: Concerned Electricity Generation Units.
27.2 NO. OF WIND MILLS GENERATING UNITS WITH PRODUCTION DATA
Year: 2016-17
SL. NO. Name and Place of Wind Install Capacity Generation Mills Generation exist (in Mega Units) (in Mega Units)
1 Nil Nil Nil
Source: Concerned Electricity Generation Units.
89
28.1 POLICE FORCE
Year: 2016
No. of Out Actual Sl. Name of the Police All Women Police Posts police No. City Year Stations Station Strength
CHENNAI- 1 2016 135 35 2 N.A CITY
Source: State Crime Record Bureau Chennai-28
Road Accident Particulars For Chennai City During the Year 2016
Fatal Grievous Minor Injury Non Injury Total Injury
N.A N.P.K N.A N.P.I N.A N.P.I N.A N.A
1155 1183 1888 2227 4162 5122 281 7486
N.A. -Number of Accident
N.P.K. - Number of persons killed
N.I.-Number of persons Injured
Source: Crime Review in TamilNadu‟ by SCRB, Chennai
90
28.2 COGNIZABLE OFFENCES UNDER INDIAN PENAL CODE
(Including Attempts)
Year: 2016
SL. Item Number of Cases Reported NO. 2015 2016
1. Murder 140 133
2. Temé to commit Murder 212 231
2. Culpable Homicide Note amounting to 7 4 Murder
3. Rape 29 25
4. Kidnapping and Abduction 37 34
5. Dacoit 6 11
6. Robbery 67 103
7. Burglary 271 541
8. Thefts 1052 3070
9. Riots 151 94
10. Criminal Breach of Trust 66 13
11. Cheating 272 262
12. Counterfeiting 70 45
Source: City Crime Record Bureau Chintadripet.
91
28.3 PRISONS AND CONVICTS
Year: 2016
SL. NO. Classification of Prisons Number
1. Central Prisons 1250 2. Special Prison for Women -- 3. Sub-Jails -- 4 District Jail -- 5 Special Sub-Jails -- 6 Open Air Prison -- 7 FifthGarden (Salem) -- 8 BorstalSchool -- Total 1250
CLASSIFICATION OF CONVICTS
Year: 2016
SL. NO. Length of Sentences Male Female Total
1. Below One Year 22 -- 22
Above One Year and not exceeding Two 8 -- 8 2. Years
Above Two Years and not exceeding Five 47 -- 47 3. Years
Exceeding Five Years and not exceeding 72 -- 72 4. Ten Years
5. Exceeding Ten Years 2 -- 2
26. Life Sentence 519 -- 519
7. Sentence to death 2 -- 2
Total 672 -- 672
Source: Supt. Of Prison (convict) Puzhal Chennai-66
92
28.4 NO. OF CASES REGISTERED UNDER P.C.R.
Year:2016
SL. NO. Name of the Stations Year No. of Cases Registered.
Under P.C.R Under P.O.A Act.
1. Chennai District 2015 0 6
2016 3 3
Source: Crime Review in TamilNadu‟ by SCRB, Chennai - 28
28.5 NO. OF CASES REGISTERED AGAINST WOMEN
Year: 2016
Sl. No. Nature of Crime No. of Cases
2015 2016
1. Rape 29 25 2. Kidnapping and abduction 15 15 3. Dowry Death 7 5 4. Cruelty by Husband 196 178 5. Molestation 68 63 6. Sexual Harassment 2 3 7. Importune of girls 0 0 8. Dowry Prohibition 3 9 Total 320 298 Source: Crime Review in TamilNadu’ by SCRB, Chennai - 28
93
29 PUBLIC HEALTH
29.1 PUBLIC HEALTH AND MEDICAL SERVICES RENDERED BY
ORGANISATIONS AND INDIVIDUAL
Year:2015-16
SL. NO. Items Numbers
1. Hospitals 22
2. Dispensaries 140
3. Sanitary --
4. Nursing Home 136
5. Maternity & Child Welfare Clinic 3
6. Allopathy >100009(PMP)
7. Ayurvedic 3
8. Unani 3
9. Homeopathy 3
Source: Public Health Department
29.2 NO. OF PRIMARY HEALTH CENTRES WITH SUB-CENTRES
Year: 2016-17
SL. NO. Name of the District / No. of Primary Health No. of Sub-Centres Municipality Centres
1 Chennai 140 --
Source: Director of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Chennai-6
94
30. PRINTING AND PUBLICATION
30.1 NO. OF NEWS PAPERS, WEEKLY MAGAZINES, MONTHLY MAGAZINES ETC., PUBLISHED
NUMBER OF NEWSPAPERS IN 2001
(Language & Periodicity – wise)TAMILNADU
weeklies
-
nightliles
Total
-
nguages
Dailies Others
Annuals
Weeklies
Monthlies
La Quarterlies
Fort Tri/Bi English 24 5 61 46 237 103 54 15 545
Hindi 1 0 2 2 15 4 1 0 25
Assamese 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 2
Bengali 0 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 3
Gujarati 0 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 3
Kannada 0 0 1 1 8 0 1 0 11
Malayalam 3 0 0 1 14 1 0 0 19
Marathi 0 0 0 1 3 0 0 0 4
Nepali 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1
Oriya 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 2
Punjabi 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 3
Sanskrit 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 2
Tamil 356 43 103 245 1053 34 23 6 2163
Telugu 2 0 5 4 46 2 2 0 61
Urdu 1 5 7 0 4 0 0 0 17
Bilingual 3 0 13 17 143 21 3 2 202
Multilingual 0 0 1 1 19 3 3 1 28
Others 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 2
Total 390 53 193 320 1555 169 89 24 3093
Source: The press in India 2002 46th Annual Report
95
30.2 NO. OF PRINTING PRESSES IN THE DISTRICT
Year: 2016-17
SL. Name of the District No. of the Type of the Press (Letter Press / NO. / Municipality Printing Press Off set / Litho / Colour Graphics)
1 62 Letter Press CHENNAI 64 Ofset
Source: Additional Director, Industrial Safety and Health, Chennai-32
96
31 PRICE INDICES
31.1.WHOLESALE PRICE INDEX OF TAMIL NADU - 2016
BASE YEAR:1970-71=100
Non- Fuel, Primary Food Manufactured All Period Food Minerals Power & Articles Articles Products Commodities Articles Light
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
2015 3045.81 3825.03 1825.01 1584.95 2862.55 2245.84 2685.84
Jan `16 3266.82 4130.50 1916.62 1577.67 2813.67 2297.83 2823.53
Feb `16 3218.06 4044.34 1927.35 1577.67 2813.66 2293.18 2795.80
Mar `16 3240.13 4083.06 1922.95 1577.67 2822.06 2296.42 2809.12
Apr `16 3252.95 4098.89 1931.36 1577.67 2891.35 2311.94 2824.95
May `16 3294.65 4166.48 1932.23 1577.67 2964.23 2317.59 2851.78
June `16 3339.08 4227.66 1950.95 1577.67 2971.12 2329.37 2880.59
July `16 3394.80 4299.24 1982.92 1577.67 2969.12 2343.52 2916.09
Aug `16 3426.93 4326.56 2024.29 1577.67 2734.16 2345.71 2926.33
Sep '16 3422.74 4309.04 2041.85 1577.67 2756.32 2361.54 2931.79
Oct `16 3440.02 4329.02 2049.33 1723.58 2902.12 2374.93 2951.53
Nov `16 3455.21 4350.46 2054.86 1723.58 3301.25 2381.74 2975.54
Dece‟16 3454.76 4319.46 2093.43 1992.06 3694.67 2399.88 2996.09
Average 3350.51 4223.73 1985.68 1636.52 2969.48 2337.80 2890.26
Source: Department of Economics and Statistics, Chennai-6.
97
31.2. CONSUMER PRICE INDEX NUMBERS FOR INDUSTRIAL WORKERS - 2016-17
BASE YEAR: 2001=100
Cuddalore Nagercoil Period Chennai Tiruchy Madurai Coimbatore Coonoor Salem * * 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
2015 248 261 259 243 261 254 135 138
Jan `16 261 273 273 249 273 269 141 144
Feb `16 257 266 266 248 268 266 138 141
Mar `16 254 262 264 245 267 265 136 138
Apr `16 255 261 261 249 269 263 138 139
May `16 262 269 265 257 278 275 142 143
June `16 258 269 270 258 276 272 142 144
July `16 255 267 273 253 275 272 142 145
Aug `16 252 262 263 250 272 270 140 143
Sep '16 249 264 260 249 271 270 139 142
Oct `16 250 265 264 248 273 270 138 142
Nov `16 250 264 263 248 272 260 139 142
Dece‟16 252 266 261 247 272 261 138 145
Average 255 266 265 250 272 268 139 142
Source: Director of Labour Bureau, Shimla.
* Source: Department of Economics and Statistics, Chennai-6 (Base:2011=100)
98
31.3. CONSUMER PRICE INDEX NUMBERS FOR SELECTED ESSENTIAL ITEMS IN RURAL TAMIL NADU - 2016-17.
BASE YEAR:1970-71=100
Fuel & Period Food Clothing Others Composite Index Light 1 2 3 4 5 6
April‟16 3993.00 3207.00 2248.00 4594.00 3895.86
May‟16 4032.00 3220.00 2249.00 4660.00 3933.29
June‟16 4053.00 3315.00 2252.00 4686.00 3958.61
July‟16 4079.00 3319.00 2267.00 4715.00 3982.81
Aug‟16 4091.00 3387.00 2292.00 4783.00 4003.73
Sep‟16 4096.00 3541.00 2318.00 4861.00 4025.60
Oct‟16 4109.00 3604.00 2343.00 4941.00 4047.97
Nov‟16 4121.00 3661.00 2362.00 4990.00 4066.31
Dece‟16 4134.00 3723.00 2388.00 5030.00 4085.43
Jan‟17 4146.00 3759.00 2388.00 5049.00 4098.93
Feb‟17 4164.00 3759.00 2388.00 5062.00 4114.37
Mar‟17 4185.00 3765.00 2391.00 5075.00 4132.76
Average 4100.25 3521.67 2328.83 4870.50 4028.81
Source: Department of Economics and Statistics, Chennai -6.
99
31.4 CONSUMER PRICE INDEX NUMBERS FOR SELECTED ESSENTIAL ITEMS IN URBAN TAMIL NADU - 2016-17. BASE YEAR:1970-71=100
Fuel & Composite Period Food Clothing Others Light Index 1 2 3 4 5 6
April‟16 3632.00 3152.00 2776.00 3463.00 3523.22
May‟16 3643.00 3164.00 2777.00 3511.00 3540.19
June‟16 3658.00 3164.00 2777.00 3516.00 3551.60
July‟16 3700.00 3177.00 2786.00 3541.00 3586.87
Aug‟16 3704.00 3192.00 2806.00 3638.00 3608.67
Sep‟16 3710.00 3200.00 2830.00 3706.00 3626.57
Oct‟16 3727.00 3210.00 2844.00 3779.00 3652.67
Nov‟16 3737.00 3214.00 2861.00 3838.00 3671.16
Dece‟16 3745.00 3215.00 2869.00 3864.00 3681.82
Jan‟17 3754.00 3216.00 2870.00 3886.00 3692.09
Feb‟17 3766.00 3216.00 2874.00 3890.00 3701.44
Mar‟17 3788.00 3216.00 2874.00 3896.00 3717.96
Average 3713.67 3194.67 2828.67 3710.67 3629.52
Source: Department of Economics and Statistics, Chennai-6.
100
32. QUALITY CONTROL
32.1 LIST OF INDUSTRIAL/ESTABLISHMENT UNITS HAVING QUALITY CONTROL FACILITIES AND THE PRODUCTS SUBJECTED TO QUALITY CONTROL.
Year: 2016-17
SL. List of Industries Establishment Units having, Products subjected to NO. Quality Control Facilities Quality Control
NOT AVAILABLE
Source: Concerned Office
33. REGISTRATION
33.1 NO. OF REGISTRATION OFFICES IN THE DISTRICT Year: 2016-17 SL. NO. Registration Districts No. of Regn. Offices
1 CHENNAI NORTH 12
2 CHENNAI SOUTH 17
3 CHENNAI CENTRAL 10
4 TOTAL 39
Source: Deputy Inspector General of Registration Chennai Zone.
33.2 REGISTRATION AND AGGREGATE VALUE OF PROPERTIES TRANSFERRED DURING THE YEAR Year: 2016-17 SL. Name of the No of Registration Aggregate Value of properties NO. Municipality (Movable and Immovable) transferred (Movable and Immovable) (In Crores) CHENNAI 2382.62 10626 1 NORTH
CHENNAI 1363.82 2 147537 SOUTH
CHENNAI 73075.17 3 40934 CENTRAL
4 TOTAL 199097 76821.61
Source. : Deputy Registrar Chennai Region.
101
34. REPAIR AND SERVICE
34.1 AUTHORISED AUTOMOBILES REPAIR AND SERVICE STATIONS
Year: 2014-15
Name of the District / Municipalities Authorized Automobiles Repair and Service (i’ No's.)
CHENNAI 83
Source: Concerned Office.
34.2 AUTHORISED ELECTRICAL AND ELECTRONIC GOODS REPAIR AND SERVICE UNITS Year:2014-15 Name of the District / Municipalities Electrical and Electronic goods Repair and Service Units
(i’ No's)
Chennai 78
Source: Concerned Office
102
35. RESTAURANTS AND HOTELS
35.1 RESTAURANTS, CAFES AND OTHER EATING AND DRINKING PLACES
Year: 2016-17
SL. NO. Items Place
1. Hotel 412
2. Cafes 1910
3. Other Eating and Drinking Centers 4883
TOTAL 7205
Source: Concerned Office.
35.2 DETAILS OF HOTELS
Year: 2016-17
SL. Place Categories Numbers NO.
1 CHENNAI Coffee and Meals Hotels 210
2 -do- Restaurant 1135
3 -do- Fast Food 1069
4 -do- Ice Cream Parlour 254
5 -do- Teas Stall 3260
6 -do- Tea and Tiffin 822
7 -do- S.M. Stall 1139
103
8 -do- Meals Hotel 48
9 -do- Coffee and Tiffin Hotel 210
10 -do- Tea Stall with Amf 1512
11 -do- Cool Drinks 624
12 -do- Bakery 1454
13 -do- Military Hotels 8
14 -do- Eating House 2165
Source: Concerned Office.
36. RECREATION AND CULTURAL SERVICES
36.1 LIST OF CINEMA THEATRES AND THEIR CAPACITIES
Year: 2014-15
Name of the District / Name of the Cinema Capacity SL. Municipality Theatres NO.
1 CHENNAI 141 43251
Source: District Collectorate.
36.2 LIST OF CLUBS AND ASSOCIATIONS
Year: As on31st March 2017
SL. NO. Place No. of Club and Association
1 Chennai 39
Source: District Collectorate.
104
36.3 LIST OF MOTION PICTURE DISTRIBUTORS AND PROJECTION SERVICES
Year: 2016-17
S.No. Name of the District / Municipality Name of the Picture Distributors / Projection Services
1 Chennai 61
Source: Concerned Controlling Departments.
37. SOCIAL WELFARE 37.1 PURATCHI THALAIVAR M.G.R. NUTRITIOUS MEALS PROGRAMME CENTRES Year : 2015 - 2016
No. of centers
School sector Local Body Sector Social Sector Total welfare ICDS Panchayat Municipal Panchayat Municipal TINP Union Bodies Union Bodies
1) Chief Minister Noon Meals Program me (ICDS) -- 1342 1342
2) School centers -- 633 633
Source: District social welfare office
37.2 NO. OF BENEFICIARIES UNDER PURATCHI THALAIVAR M.G.R. NUTRITIOUS MEALS PROGRAMME Year 2016-17
Age Wise Beneficiaries Total Nutritious Sl.No. School 1-5 6-8 9&10 Total Meal Centers
1 Corporation School N.M Centers 25611 16187 7016 48814 299
2 Govt., & Govt., Aided School N.M 19017 21139 6652 46808 309 Centers
3 AdhiDravidarWelfareSchoolN.Mcenters 575 527 363 1465 7
4 NCLP -- 289 -- 289 17
Total 45203 38142 14031 97376 632
Source: Chennai Corporation
105
37.3NUMBER OF BENEFICIARIES UNDER FREE SUPPLY OF TEXT BOOKS AND UNIFORMS Year :2016-17 Sl,No NAME OF THE Age group 6-14 (Standards I to VIII) DISTRICT/MUNICIPA LITY Uniforms Text Books Total Boys Girls Boys Girls
CHENNAI 19065 18327 73421 73421
Source: Chief Educational officer Chennai-15
37.4 NUMBER OF BENEFICIARIES UNDER SOCIAL SECUTRITY AND PENSION SCHEMES As On 31.03.2017 Taluk Indra physicall Destit Destitute Destitute Unmarri IGNW Total Gandhi y handi ute and Agri. ed PS National cappped Widow Deserted Labour Women old Age Pension pensio Wives Pension Pension Pension n Pension Tondiarpet-01 13559 427 5945 282 1213 70 9201 30697
Purasawalkam- 8386 268 4321 373 763 103 7245 02 21459
Perambur-03 15639 419 6550 584 1247 91 11816 36346
Ayanavaram-04 5488 243 2702 369 677 117 4445 14041
Aminjikarai-05 4779 114 5621 406 858 58 3687 15523
Egmore-06 5074 213 5926 455 954 125 5048 17795
Mambalam-07 10316 177 5300 688 1161 177 6078 23897
Mylapore-08 8479 527 11685 2189 924 287 8381 32472
Guindy-09 4572 94 3403 570 474 86 2562 11761
Velachery-10 6464 194 4663 1668 546 102 4040 17677
Total 82756 2676 56116 7584 8817 1216 62503 221668
Source: Revenue Department(Chennai Collectorate)
106
37.5 FREE HOUSES AND HOUSE SITES DISTRIBUTED TO COMMUNITIES
Year:2014-15
Name of the House distributed district S.C. S.T. B.C. D.C.& Others Total MBC
Chennai 36 0 Nil Nil Nil 36
Source: TamilNadu Slum Clearance Board
38. CONSERVANCY SERVICES
38.1 No. of Conservancy Workers engaged in Conservancy, Garbage and Debris disposal and other particulars. Year:2015-16 No. of persons engaged other connected works related with No. of Workers No. of Garbage and conservancy engaged in Sewage disposal Dump conservancy site No. of persons No’s Work
Conservancy 43 Supervisor 19180 (Including Conservancy Permanent and Kodungaiyur Dump Site 81 Inspector Temporary Perungudi Dump Site Labours) Conservancy Mastery 313
Conservancy Workers 7781
Source: Suptd. Engr, Solid Waste Management Section,Chennai Corporation.
107
38.2 NO. OF VEHICLES ENGAGED IN CONSERVANCY SERVICES 2015-16
Sl.No. Name of the Corporation No. of Vehicles engaged in Sanitary Services.
Compactors LMV-129 241 HMV-112 2) Haluage Tipper Trucks 26
3) Tipper Lorrys 123 LMV-28 HMV -95 1 Chennai 4) Mechanical Sweepers 12 5) Skid Steer Loader 43
6)Front End Loader 20
7)Comman Collection Bin 8166
TOTAL 8631
Source: Suptd. EngrSolid Waste Management Section, Chennai Corporation.
39.SCIENTIFIC AND RESEARCH SERVICE INSTITUTIONS AND LABORATORIES ENGAGED IN RESEARCH WORK Name and address of Institutions and Type of Research Field Laboratories
1. Poultry Research Station, Chennai-35 Poultry 2. King Institute, Guindy Medical 3. Leather Research Institute, Chennai – 20. Leather Source: Concerned Institutions
40. STORAGE FACILITIES 40.1 LIST OF AGRICULTURAL AND NON-AGRICULTURAL STORAGE GODOWNS Name and address of Agricultural Name of address of Non-Agricultural Godowns Godowns
Nil Nil
Source: District warehousing office.
40.2 LIST OF COLD STORAGE AND GODOWNS
SL. Name and address of the cold storage NO. 1. Nil 2. Nil Source: Concerned Department
108
41. TEXTILES 41.1 No. of Ginning, Spinning and weaving mills SL. Name of the No. of Ginning No. of Spinning No. of NO. District/Municipa mills mills Weaving mills lities
NIL NIL NIL NIL
Source : Concerned office
41.2 QUANTUM OF PRODUCTION DURING THE YEAR.
Ginning Mills Spinning mills Weaving millsProduction production production
NIL NIL NIL
Source: Concerned office
42. TRADE AND COMMERCE
42.1 NO. OF MAJOR AND MINOR TRADE AND COMMERCIAL ESTATE
Year:2015-16
No. of major Trade No. of minor Trade No. of Commercial estate
28 13 2 Source: Secretary, Market Committee
43. TRANSPORT
43.1 LENGTH OF ROADS (IN KILOMETRES) AS ON 31.3.2017 NATIONAL HIGHWAYS
Surfaced Roads Unsur Grand faced Item Cement Bituminous Water Total Roads Total Concrete bound Macadam
N.H45/4/5 0.0 29.80 0.0 29.80 0.0 29.80 State -- 54.6 0.0 54.6 -- 54.6 Highways Source: Secretariat, Transport Department,Chennai-9
109
43.2 ROAD ACCIDENTS
Year: 2016-17
SL. Name of the Year Total No. of persons Number of NO. District/Municipality Number of injured persons killed Accidents
1 Chennai City 2016 7486 7349 1183 Source: “Crime Review in Tamilnadu” by SCRB, Chennai
43.3 REGISTERED MOTOR VEHICLES as on 31.3.2017
Commercial Vehicles
Stage Carriage Auto Ordinary Taxi Motor Cab Maxi cab Rickshaw Public Private
7517 6 78352 561 31431 19949
Omni Private School Ambulance Fire Light Articulated Buses Service Bus Fighter Commercial Vehicle Vehicle Vehicle and others
165 1677 2930 1847 116 49237 2784
Lorry Tractor / Total Commercial Vehicles State National Trailer Permit Permit
31701 6675 1654 236602
Non Commercial Vehicles
Tri-Cycle Motor Cycle Scooter Moped Motor Car Jeep Auto
2616347 700547 682460 2795 798428 9863
Three Four Road Station Wagon Tractor Others Wheeler Wheeler Rollers
-- 4629 8599 2587 222 10225
110
Table 43.3 Concluded
Total Non- Total Commercial Total Non-Commercial Grand Total Commercial Vehicles Vehicles Vehicles (Commercial + Non- Commercial )
4836702 236602 4836702 5073304
Source: State Transport Department, Chennai.6
43.4 TRANSPORT CORPORATIONS
Year: 2015-16
Sl. Name of the Year of Headquarter District No. of No Corporations Formation covered buses as on 31st March
1. Metropolitan Transport Chennai Corporation Ltd, 01.1.1972 Chennai Metropolitan Chennai (Division-I) Area (South) 3794 2. Metropolitan Transport Chennai Corporation Ltd, 19.1.1994 Chennai Metropolitan Chennai. (Division-II) Area (North)
3. State Express Transport Corporation EntireState of 01.4.1998 Chennai Ltd, Chennai (Tamil Tamil Nadu Nadu Division-I) 1099 4. State express Transport Corporation 27.1.1994 Chennai Inter-State Chennai, Ltd, Tamil Nadu Division-II
Source: Secretariat, Transport Department,Chennai.9
111
43.5 SELECT INDICATORS ON OVERALL PERFORMANCE OF STATE TRANSPORT CORPORATIONS
Year :2015-16
Source: DETAILS FURNISHED Transport ITEM Department FOR THE YEAR 2015-16
Sl .No
1 Fleet Strength 3794
2 Kilometers operated carried per day (in Lac) 9.63
3 Number of passengers carried per day (in 49.65 Lac)
4 Fleet Utilization (Percentage) 84.16
5 Kilometer efficiency (Percentage) 95.09
6 Kilometer run per liter of diesel 4.35
a) City / Town
b) Mofussil
7 Number of routes (As on day) 806
8 Number of New routes introduced during the -- year
9 New villages benefited during the year Nil
10 Benefitted village population (in Lac) Nil
11 Staff strength 22589
12 Number of New Buses put on road 82
Source: Secretariat, Transport Department,Chennai.9
112
43.6 RAILWAY LINES AND STATIONS Year:2016-17
Broad Broad Meter Gauge & Total Item Gauge Gauge Meter Gauge
1. Route Length (in Km.) 4699.51 380.00 -- 5079.51
2. Tract Length (in Km.) 6813.92 380 -- 7193.92
3.Number of Railway Station 611 8 -- 619
Source: Southern Railway, Head quarters office, works division, Chennai-3
43.7 PORT DEVELOPMENT
1. Major Ports: CHENNAI 2. Intermediate ports: CHENNAI AND ENNORE 3. Minor ports Vessels entered and Cargo handled
Year:2016-17
Name of the Port Vessels entered Cargo handled (in million tonnes)
Major Port: 2215 50.21 Chennai Intermediate Ports N.A N.A 1. Cuddalore 2. Nagapattinam Minor Ports
Kilakarai
1. Rameswaram 2. Pamban 3. Colachal N.A N.A 4. Kanniyakumari 5. Valinokkam * Including Transhipment, Cargo and Container cargo
Source: Port Trust
113
43.8 AIR PORTS
Year: 2016-17
Sl. Airport Passengers (in ‘Nos’)
No. Embarked Disembarked Transit Total
1 Chennai International 2606512 2542648 59088 5208248
2 Chennai Domestic 6573097 6580870 -- 13153967
Cargo Handled (Tonne) Revenue (Rs. In Lac) Loaded Unloaded Total Traffic Cargo Commercial Other Total Income 1 Chennai 157410 110616 268026 N.A N.A N.A N.A N.A International
2 Chennai Domestic 48869 42322 91191 N.A N.A N.A N.A N.A
Source: Aviation Department (Airport Authority of India)
43.9 PRIVATE TRANSPORT OPERATIONS
Year: 2016-17
SL. NO. Name of the Transport Operations
1 TVS / ASI/ LG
114
44. TOURISM
44.1 PLACES OF TOURIST ATTRACTION
Year: 2016-17
SL. No. Tourist Place
1. Fort St. George
2. Santhome Basilica
3. Anna Square (Marina)
4. High Court (Parry‟s Corner)
5. Valluvarkottam, Nungambakkam
6. Gandhi, Kamaraj&RajajiMandapam, Guindy.
7. Children's Park
8. Deer Park
9. SnakePark, Raj Bhavan Estate
10. Aquarium (Marina Beach)
11. Kalakshetra, Beas ant Nagar
12. Anna Zoological Park, Vandalur
13. MuseumNationalArtGallery and Connemara Library
14. M.G.R. Memorial, Chennai
15. Shrine Velankanni and SriDeviAshtalakshmiTempleBeasant Nagar.
Source: District Tourist Development Office.
44.2 THE LIST OF PLACES OF WORSHIP
Year: 2016-17
SL. NO. Places of Worship
1. KapaleeswararTemple, Mylapore. 2. ParthasarathyTemple, Triplicane. 3. Shrine Velankanni and Sri. Devi Ashta Lakshmi Temple. 4. VadapalaniAndavarTemple, Vadapalani. Source: Concerned Office.
115
44.2-A. The daily visitors at Tourist Places in Chennai – 2016-17
Sl.No. Place Domestic (in Nos.) Foreign (in Nos.) 1 Valluvarkottam, Nungambakkam 74615 1355 2 Children‟s Park 975791 22524 3 Snake Park, Raj Bhavan Estate 384036 2114 4 Anna Zoological Park, Vandalur 3214120 494448 Source: Director of Tourism, Chennai-2
44.3 LIST OF HOTELS AND RESTAURANTS
Year:2016-17
Sl.No List of Hotels List of Restaurants
1 1421 352
Source: Concerned Office.
44.4 RECREATION FACILITIES
Year:2015-16
Sl. No.of Cinema No. of No.of No. of No. of No Theatres Stadiums Swimming Playgrounds Parks pool
1 83 1 2 213 503
44.5 THE LIST OF TRAVEL AGENTS
Year :2015-16
Sl. No. List of Travel Agents No. of travel agents
1. Private Travel Agents 261 2. Government tourist Agent Office 16 Other State Travel Agents, Information 3. 12 Centres 4. Airlines Agents/Offices 148 Source: Concerned Office. 116
44.6 TRAIN AND AIR SERVICE TIMINGS
SL. NO. Train Timings Air Service Timings
NA NA
Source: Concerned Office.
45. VITAL STATISTICS
45.1 BIRTHS AND DEATHS REGISTERED
Year: 2015-16
Sl. Name of the Live Births Deaths Infant Death No. Corporation Registered Registered
1 Chennai 102772 56731 --
Source: City Health Officer, Chennai Corporation
45.2 BIRTH, DEATH AND INFANT MORTALITY RATES
Year: 2016-17 Birth Rate Death Rate Infant Mortality Rate Expectation of Life (T.N)
Male: --
------
Female: --
Source: City Health Officer, Chennai Corporation 117
45.3 DEATH BY CAUSESYear: 2016-17
Sl.No. Name of the Causes for Death No. of the Death
1. Abortions -- 2. Accidental Burns 874 3. Accidental Poisoning &Other Than Food Poisoning 5 4. Anaemia 41 5. Appendicitis -- 6. Bites or strings of animals insects etc., 15 7. Bronchitis Asthma 195 8 Cancer 2583 9 Chronic Liver Diseases 1154 10 Dengue 1 11 DiabetiesMelhitus 3579 12 Falls / Drowing 102 13 Food Poisoning 5 14 Heart Diseases and Heart Attack (Myocardial Infarction) 27372 15 Homicide 34 16 Jaundice 59 17 Accident – Road Traffic Accident 225 18 AIDS 8 19 Maternal Death -- 20 Malaria 3 21 Measles 1 20 Meningitis 7 21 Other Accidents not elsewhere classified 1645 22 Others 3497 23 Others not elsewhere classified 2800 24 Paralysis 38 25 Pneumonia 898 26 Prematurity Birth 364 27 Rabies 2 28 Senility 5277 29 Suicide 858 30 Swine Flu 3 31 Syphilis and other Genito Urinary Diseases 1 32 Tetanus -- 33 Traffic Accident 827 34 Tuberculosis 647 35 Typhoid 1 36 Accident – Air Accident 2 37 Accident – Train Traffic Accident 106
118
38 Asphyxia 10 39 Auto Immunine -- 40 Multi Organ Failure 401 41 Kidney - Nephritis 49 42 Kidney – Other Kidney Kisorder 449 43 Kidney – Reneal Failure 323 44 Drowning / Water Accident 52 45 Respiratory Failure 3495 46 Septicaemia 497 Total 58505 Source: Zonal Health Officer, Chennai Corporation
119
46. VOLUNTARY SERVICES
46.1 LIST OF VOLUNTARY SERVICES AVAILABLE IN THE DISTRICT FOR THE
DEVELOPMENT OF RURAL AND URBAN POPULATION
Year: 2016-17
Sl.No. List of Voluntary Service (in No.)
1 Andhra Mahila Sabha - Unit -2 2 Family Planning Association India, Ashok Nagar 3 Indian Red Cross Society 4 Manglapuram (Family Welfare Centre) 5 Periyar Thidal (Urban Health Post) 6 Voluntary Health Organisation Services 7 Sri Ramakrishna Vivekananda Source: Corporation of Greater Chennai-1
47. WATER WORK AND SUPPLY
47.1 NO. OF SCHEMES OPERATED IN THE DISTRICT
Year: 2016-17
Sl.No. Name of the Schemes No. of the Programmes in the Schemes
1. Puzhal Water Treatment Plant 1 2. Kilpauk Water Treatment Plant 1 3. Water Treatment Plant at 1 Chembarambakkam 4 Vadakuthu (Veeranam) Water 1 Treatment Plant 5. Surapattu Water Treatment Plant 1 6. Desalination Plant at Minjur 1 7. Desalination Plant at Minjur 1 Source: Managing Director, Metropolitan Water Supply and Sewerage Board
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47.2 NO. OF WORKERS ENGAGED IN THE WATER WORKS AND SUPPLY Year: 2016-17
SL. NO. Name of the Schemes No. of Workers engaged in water works and supply
1 Operation and Maintenance 839
Source: Managing Director, Metropolitan Water Supply and Sewerage Board
47.3 NO. OF HOUSE CONNECTIONS, FOUNTAINS
Year:2016-17
Sl.No. Name of the District No. of House water connections Discharge of water/ per person/ per day Upto previous year – 2016 - 585056 120 lpcd – Normal 1 Chennai During the year - 2017 - 20454 70 lpcd - Drought Total - 605510
Source: Managing Director, Metropolitan Water Supply and Sewerage Board
48.1 Fire and Rescue Services
Year : 2015-16
Sl. Name of the No. of Fire No. of No. of No. of Calls attended No. Division Stations Vehicles Staffs working Fire Call Rescue Call
1 Chennai South 11 35 181 802 631 Division
2 North division 9 26 179 378 269
3 Chennai Central 9 32 138 629 518 Division
4 Chennai Sub- 10 30 212 585 539 Urban Division
5 Total 39 123 710 2394 1957
Source: Division Fire Offices
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