Challan

Challan is an official form or other kind of document, piece of paperwork, citation, etc. It is a way of crediting the money to one's bank account through a form, generally used in India and Pakistan as a receipt for payment or delivery.

E-challan is an electronic format of the challan. An e-challan can also be defined as a specific format used for depositing or remitting the contribution or statutory payment at a bank or treasury.

Description

Generally, challan is an official form or other kind of document, piece of paperwork, citation, etc. Challan can be used as a way of crediting the money to one's bank account through a form. In India, Bangladesh and Pakistan, it is used as a receipt for payment or delivery.

Use

An example of a challan would be a spot traffic ticket issued by the traffic police for a violation. This challan would then have to be paid directly by cash, at an e-seva center, or by any other payment mode as specified on the challan. Government of Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh has also introduced mechanism to enable payment of e-challans with the help of PDAs on road by commuters for their pending e-challans.

e-challan

E-challan is an electronic format of challan. An e-challan can also be defined as a specific format used for depositing or remitting the contribution or statutory payment at a bank or treasury.

The government of Tamil Nadu ,Telangana, Andhra Pradesh has established a new challan system called e-challans. They have also established a website where one can check if their vehicle has any traffic offences registered against it. This website will detail the offence description, fine amount, user charges, and the total fine amount. In Coimbatore city the system started in October 2013 and service uses hand-held machines for Spot Fining System, which runs on a low cost platform named VIOLET (Violation Prevention and Regulation Enforcement), which runs of android-based tablets or cellular phone and is also integrated to a Bluetooth printer to dispatch receipts.[1]

e-challan system is being introduced in other cities of India and is now operational in Ahmedabad,[2] Chennai, Hyderabad, Bangalore, Lucknow, Delhi,[3] and Vijayawada. It is being evaluated at Mumbai and Pune.[4]

gollark: ++tel graph
gollark: Unfortunately this is also horribly difficult to implement and possibly not very necessary.
gollark: Matrix is somewhat cool in that instead of, like IRC/XMPP, just relaying events as they happen from some central trusted servers, it is a protocol for synchronizing an eventually consistent chatroom between everyone everywhere.
gollark: It's a possibly better chat thing I haven't looked into much.
gollark: As I said: oneish working implementations, a giant spec, and also (I didn't actually say this) hundreds of megabytes of memory use if you join big rooms.

See also

References

  1. Palaniappan, V. S. (7 October 2013). "Police to use hand-held machines to issue e-challans". The Hindu. Retrieved 25 June 2014.
  2. Kaushik, Himanshu (28 March 2018). "E-challan makes a comeback from April 15". The Times of India. Retrieved 25 August 2019.
  3. Christopher Gonsalves (12 March 2018). "Frustations rise over new traffic e-challan system in Delhi | IndiaToday". Indiatoday.in. Retrieved 5 April 2018.
  4. "'E Challan' Hyderabad". online yojana.

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