Tamil Nadu CM Vijay holds first Collectors-police conference, 43 issues on agenda
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Tamil Nadu Chief Minister C. Joseph Vijay on Monday, 29 June convened his first joint conference with District Collectors and senior police officers since assuming office, kicking off a two-day review of governance, law and order, and development priorities in Chennai. The sessions, running from 29 to 30 June, are being held ahead of the presentation of the revised Budget for 2026-27.
Scale and Scope of the Conference
The two-day conclave brings together District Collectors and senior police officials from across Tamil Nadu to deliberate on 43 key governance issues spanning public administration, policing, welfare, agriculture, health, education, and infrastructure. Chief Secretary M. Sai Kumar held a preparatory session with Collectors and senior officials on Sunday, 28 June, to set the ground ahead of the formal proceedings.
Law and Order Priorities
A central focus of the joint sessions is the strengthening of law and order. Measures under review include curbing drug trafficking, cybercrime, illegal mining, and illicit liquor and tobacco sales, alongside ensuring corruption-free public service delivery and addressing crimes against women.
Officials will also review the execution of pending warrants, monitoring of habitual offenders, handling of caste-related issues, and the speedy disposal of cases under the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act. The conference will additionally assess implementation of the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act, protection of senior citizens, and welfare of migrant workers.
Agriculture, Revenue and Civic Agenda
Separate sessions for District Collectors will evaluate district-wise performance across key departments. Agriculture discussions will cover the Agristack farmers' registry, digital crop surveys, farmers' markets, and Farmer Producer Organisations (FPOs). Revenue administration will be reviewed through discussions on online revenue services, issuance and transfer of pattas, land identification for public infrastructure, and disaster preparedness.
The government will also deliberate on retrieval of encroached temple lands, civic amenities around temples, expansion of rooftop solar and green energy projects, and road safety initiatives. Stray dog management and the efficiency of the Public Distribution System (PDS) are also on the agenda.
Social Welfare and Development Schemes
The conference agenda extends to tuberculosis control, screening for non-communicable diseases, higher education enrolment, prevention of ragging, and school enrolment and infrastructure. Additional items include promotion of Tamil in administration, the functioning of e-Sevai and Aadhaar centres, MSME loan disbursement, drinking water supply, housing schemes including house-site pattas and the Maaman Seer Scheme, welfare of unorganised workers and persons with disabilities, restoration of water bodies, eviction of encroachments, and tourism development. The functioning of the Singapenn Adiradi Padai scheme will also come under review.
The conference is expected to set the state government's administrative priorities for the coming months, with its outcomes likely to shape key allocations in the forthcoming revised budget.