Municipal commissioner

In many countries, a municipal commissioner is an official in a municipal government such as that of a city or a town. உயர்திருநெலை மாநகர் கமிஷனர் ஐயா அவர்கலுக்கு அன்பான வணக்கம் ஐயா திநெவேலி மாநகர் தெரு ோடுகலில் சாக்டை வாாய்கள்லெ திண்டு கட்டி வியாபாரிகள் சாக்டை டைய தூர்வார முடியாத அலவுக்கு டையூர் செய்கிரார்கள் ஓவெருடைகாரருக்கும் மாதம் 2+3 மூவாயிரம் வாகை பயின்ோடலாம் சாக்டைடையூராக ரூ10+20+30+40+50ஆயிரம்தண்டம் கட்ட

பயின்ோட்லெ சாக்டைலெ திண்டு கட்ட மாட்டார்கள் இந்தநடவகை உனெ துவங்குங்க மாநகராசி தமிழகதில் முன் மாதிரியாக மாரும் நன்றி

India

In India, every Municipal Corporation in India is administratively headed by a Municipal Commissioner, who is the de facto head of the municipal corporation, the form of government which is usually granted to a city of more one million in population.

Sri Lanka

In Sri Lanka, under the Municipal Council Ordinance there is a municipal commissioner of each municipal council. He or she would be the chief administrative officer and is the highest ranking non-elected officer of the municipality and in most cases be an officer of the Sri Lanka Administrative Service on secondment. In the absence of the mayor, the municipal commissioner serves as the chief executive of the municipality and between the end of term of a mayor and election of a new mayor, the municipal commissioner would serve as the officer implementing the powers and function of the municipal council. The common seal of the council is retained by the municipal commissioner. The municipal council may appoint a Charity Commissioner of the Council.[1]

Sweden

Swedish municipalities generally employ one or more politicians as Municipal Commissioners, (Swedish: kommunalråd) one of which is usually the chairman of the executive committee.

In Sweden, the municipal commissioners for finance of Stockholm municipality (finansborgarråd) is often translated as Mayor of Stockholm, because the municipal commissioner for finance has become the top politician of Stockholm municipality since the Stockholm municipal reform 1940.

gollark: Perhaps you could solve all those issues, but I think it would be much harder than solving the ones we have *now*.
gollark: I mean, some of the issues I have would be gone without market systems, yes, but you would then introduce new much bigger ones.
gollark: No, I like that one.
gollark: The problems I have with our system are more about issues we ended up with than the entire general concept of markets.
gollark: You could complain that this is due to indoctrination of some sort by... someone, and maybe this is true (EDIT: but you could probably just change that and it would be easier than reworking the entire economy). But you can quite easily see examples of people just not actually caring about hardships far away, and I think this is a thing throughout history.

References

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