The Governor of Karnataka has stopped the Hindu Temple Bill, the president will be sent to the president; Know what is in the bill - the Governor of Karnataka Send Hindu Temples Bill for President Nod said not convinced by the government

The Governor of Karnataka, Thawarchand Houlot, preserved the Hindu Temple Bill for the President’s view. The bill aims to use the revenue received from temples as a shared fund. The governor is not satisfied with the explanation of the government and wants to wait for the decision of the Supreme Court. Ians, Bengaluru. The Governor of Karnataka, Thawarchand Houlot, reserved the Karnataka Hindu Religious Institute and the Charity Determination Amendment Bill or the Hindu Temple Bill for the president’s idea. The bill, which was approved on March 6, 2024, was again sent to the governor on May 16, 2025. The bill aims to use a large part of the revenue received from the Hindu temples of the state as a common fund. The governor said he was not satisfied with the explanation of the government. The case is being considered from the Supreme Court, so the court’s decision must be awaited. In such a situation, it would be unfair to approve the bill. Instead of agreeing on the proposed bill, the bill will be the idea of ​​the president, I consider it appropriate to keep it safe for the idea of ​​the president. The Governor preserved the Bill for the idea of ​​the president at a time when the Supreme Court recently determined a time limit for the governor and the president for approval on the bills of the states, while delivering the historical ruling in the case of the Governor of Tamil Nadu. The Pillow Court said the president would have to make a decision within three months on the bills sent by the governor. Ramalinga Reddy, Minister of the Department of Religious Services, said the bill is a ban that if the revenue of the temple is up to Rs 10 lakh, the Dharmica Parishad does not have to pay. The amount will be taken from the temples, there is an idea to collect five percent of temples ranging from Rs 10 lakh to one crore and 10 percent of temples with revenue of more than one crore calls. This amount is deposited in Dharmika Parishad. Dharmika Parishad is a committee to improve temple management for the benefit of pilgrims. The minister said there are 40 thousand to 50 thousand priests in the state, who want to help the state government. If Dharmika gets Parishad funds, we can provide them with insurance coverage. We need seven crore to eight crore calls to pay the premium. The government wants to give bursaries to the children of temple priests. Also read: 1400 temples broken in 37 years have also caught Hindus Cremit Land, a new edition originated in Kashmir amid Waqf Bill