Corporation Budget sets aside ₹101.72 cr. for drainage work
The Hindu
Kozhikode Corporation's Deputy Mayor presents innovative Budget for 2025-26, focusing on health, hygiene, literature, and urban development.
In his final Budget before the term of the current Council of the Kozhikode Corporation ends, Deputy Mayor C.P. Musafar Ahamed, who also chairs the Finance Standing Committee, presented a Budget for the financial year 2025–26 featuring a range of novel projects.
On Monday, the Deputy Mayor presented a Budget with an expenditure of ₹1,397 crore. The Corporation’s total expected revenue for 2025–26 is ₹1,744.89 crore, resulting in a surplus of ₹347.88 crore.
The Corporation has prioritised health and hygiene this time, with a maximum expenditure of ₹101.72 crore set aside for drainage work in city. Meanwhile, ₹46.79 crore has been set aside for road repairs, ₹10.28 crore for repair of buildings under the Corporation, ₹9.68 crore for the construction and maintenance of markets, and ₹7.53 crore for street lights.
Several novel projects have been introduced in the Budget for which funds have been allocated. This includes several projects connected to Kozhikode’s newfound status as the UNESCO City of Literature. The projects proposed include a Literary Museum in memory of late writer M.T. Vasudevan Nair, a theatre group by school and college students, and exploring the possibilities of Literary Tourism in the city for which ₹3 crore has been allocated.
Continuing the activities under AZHAK, the hygiene protocol of the Corporation, the Haritha Karma Senas are being formed under a business development scheme. A master plan for optimum use of the land available at Njeliyanparamba, two Resource Recovery Facilities for segregation of solid waste, a Refuse Derived Fuel plant, a plant to process construction waste and robotic cleaning on Kozhikode beach are some of the projects proposed.
The Corporation is also planning to launch a campaign ‘Kuttikal Kalikkatte’ (Let the children play) to check drug abuse and violent tendencies among children. Augmented reality labs, Innovation labs and Gender Facilitation clubs in schools, a rehabilitation project for residents of South Beach, a shelter for guest labourers, a Respite Care Centre to take care of differently abled children, an old age home for women, special industrial clusters for women, WISH (Women Initiative for sustainable and healthy life) and an online delivery system for Kudumbashree products are some of the other novel projects proposed in the Budget.
Funds have been allocated for an annexe building for the Corporation office, the City surveillance camera system and the development of Oyitty Road considering the changes brought in by the reconstruction of the railway station and a multipurpose auditorium at Chamundi Valappu.

The sun is already high in the sky, beating down fiercely on our heads, when we reach Tipu Sultan’s Summer Palace in Chamrajpet, Bengaluru. But inside the beautiful high-ceilinged structure, it is surprisingly pleasant, the interiors airy and light-filled. According to a plaque outside the two-storied edifice made out of wood, stone, mortar and plaster, construction here was started by Hyder Ali Khan in 1781 and completed by his son, Tipu Sultan, in 1791, eight years before the Tiger of Mysore would be killed by the British in 1799.