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Johor Bahru City Council

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Johor Bahru City Council

Majlis Bandaraya Johor Bahru
Local Government Act 1976
Type
Type
History
Founded1 January 1994
Preceded byJohor Bahru Municipal Council
Leadership
Mayor
Hon Dato' Haji Mohd Haffiz bin Haji Ahmad, Since 3 January 2025
Secretary
Miswan Yunus
Structure
Seats24
Political groups
Councillors:

 BN (24)

Length of term
1 April 2024–31 December 2025
Motto
Berkhidmat, Berbudaya, Berwawasan
(Service, Cultural, Visionary)
Meeting place
MBJB Tower, Bukit Senyum[1][2]
Website
www.mbjb.gov.my

Johor Bahru City Council (MBJB;Malay:Majlis Bandaraya Johor Bahru) is the city council which administratesJohor Bahru city centre and other areas of theIskandar Malaysia area inJohor,Malaysia. This agency is underJohor state government. MBJB are responsible for public health and sanitation, waste removal and management, town planning, environmental protection and building control, social and economic development and general maintenance functions of urban infrastructure.

History

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Town board and town council

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Former headquarters at Jalan Dato Onn, now one of the branch offices of the City Council. Its Enforcement, Health and Urban Transportation Departments still remain in this building.[3]

Johor Bahru City Council's history begins with the establishment of theTown Board (Malay:Lembaga Bandaran) in 1910, with office at the Harbour Board (Syahbandar) Building near Sungai Segget that also housed offices of other departments like Survey, Public Works and Post Office. The administration comprised the President, Deputy President, Principal Medical Officer, Chief Commissioner of Police and several committee figures. In 1927, Sultan Ibrahim ordered the these offices to move into the former Johore Hotel Building at Jalan Ibrahim.[4]

Town Council (Malay:Majlis Bandaran) was established under Local Election Ordinance in 1950 to replace the town board. The Councillors at the time consisted of President Secretary (Johor Civil Service Oflicer), Assistant Financial Officer Building Inspector, Town Supervisor, Heaith Inspectors, Town Board Inspectors, notice senders, peons and clerks. Council elections were held since 1952 until these were suspended in 1965.

StatusYearArea (in sq km)
Town Board193312.12
194913.85
Town Council195648.99
196268.42
197680.53

Johor Bahru Municipal Council

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Johor Bahru Municipal Council (Malay:Majlis Perbandaran Johor Bahru) was established in 1 April 1977 with an area of 119.50 square kilometres (46.14 sq mi), through merger of Town Council with Pandan and Kangkar Tebrau Local Councils on 1 April 1977 following local authorities restructuring in Johor under the provisions of the Local Government Act 1976 (Act 171).[5][6] In 1992, Johor Bahru's revenue stood at RM 63 million, a requirement for a town to be elevated to a city. The eight departments under the municipal council were the Valuation, Enforcement, Urban Services, Health and Licences, Finance, Planning, Engineering and Secretary departments.[7]

Johor Bahru City Council

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Johor Bahru was granted city status on 1 January 1994 with initial city limit of 186 square kilometres (72 sq mi).[8][9] Four housing estates of Taman Daya, Taman Megah Ria, Kota Puteri Township and Taman Rinting were transferred from Johor Bahru Tengah to the newly-declared city.[10] Its city status was officially declared by the late SultanIskandar at midnight during a celebration ceremony attended by more than 400,000 residents at the newly builtJohor Bahru City Square. The erstwhile Johor Bahru Municipal Council was also upgraded as the Johor Bahru City Council simultaneously on that day, with Yahya Hashim sworn in as its first mayor.

The new city council's non profit charity arm, the Johor Bahru City Foundation (Malay:Yayasan Bandaraya Johor Bahru,YBJB) was the brainchild ofMuhyiddin Yassin, then the Menteri Besar of Johor as well as the Municipal Council's President. It was earlier corporatised on 9 December 1993 under the Trustee Act 1952 (Incorporation) to assist the poor, the disabled and the needy communities. The Foundation was launched by fourth Malaysian Prime Minister,Mahathir Mohamad on 21 January 1995 at the MBJB Indoor Stadium in Larkin, and currently headquartered at the Johor Tourist Information Centre (JOTIC).[11]

Since the City council's establishment, its jurisdiction area expands in size, as areas around Johor Bahru City became gradually urbanised. In 2000, first parts of Tebrau area were added and transferred from Johor Bahru Tengah, increase the city limit to 220 square kilometres (85 sq mi).[12]

On a 2 July 2014 meeting, the Johor State Government decided to transfer parts of Pulai Mukim acrossSkudai River along Jalan Ismail Sultan, Second parts of Tebrau Mukim, West parts of Plentong Mukim and a small portion of Sungai Tiram Mukim from Johor Bahru Tengah Municipal Council (nowIskandar Puteri City Council) to the city council through a redelination exercise that came into effect on 1 January 2016, while areas around Taman Rinting and Sierra Perdana ceded to Pasir Gudang Municipal Council (nowPasir Gudang City Council), resulted in the current city limit of 373.18 square kilometres (144.09 sq mi).

MBJB Tower

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On 1 January 2020, Johor Bahru City Council moved its headquarters to the new state-of-the-art 15-storey-tall MBJB Tower. It is located within Astaka Holdings Limited Group’s flagship mixed development, One Bukit Senyum inPlentong Mukim, just outside the City Centre and in front ofThe Astaka residential complex. The building has a gross floor area of approximately 442,810 square feet and 583 car park lots across 7 basements or lower ground floors, considered the deepest in Johor State with 28 metres of depth. It includes modern facilities mostly with smart technologies like a 300-capacity auditorium, a 1000-capacity hall, counters, a nursery for staff use and a cafeteria.[13][14]

On 28 November 2016, MBJB acquired the site from Astaka Group's subsidiary–Astaka Padu Sdn Bhd with a cost of RM 308 million. Construction of MBJB Tower began on 3 April 2017 and was completed on 11 December 2019. The new building was launched by SultanIbrahim Iskandar on the 24th of March 2022.[15]

While most of the City Council's offices, departments and units have moved to the new building, only the Law Enforcement, Health and Urban Transportation Departments still remain at the Jalan Dato Onn Building.[16]

Symbols

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Flag of Johor Bahru City Council, and by extension, the City of Johor Bahru

Since its establishment on 1 January 1994, the city council's flag and emblem (or coat of arms, officially called a "crest" in English and "Jata" in Malay) serve as its important visual identity.

The council's flag is the only local government flag in Johor that do not display its emblem. It consists of three equal horizontal bands of red, white and blue, with a yellow crescent and star in the middle of the white band similar to flag of Labuan. The yellow crescent and star represents Islam as the city's official religion, red represents the city's prosperity and progress, blue represents the city council's role in servicing and developing the city and white represents harmony and unity of the city's populace.

The council's emblem is the first local authority emblem in Johor State to bear semblance to the state's coat of arms. It consists of a shield in the form of a blue scroll (representing urban planning) charged with two wreaths of black pepper and gambir as the state's main agricultural products at the top, while at the bottom there is a circle containing Johor state banner, buildings and gear (or cogwheel) to represent Johor Bahru as the centre of trade, industry, tourism, culture and education and capital city. The shield is supported by two Johor State arms tigers on both sides and was topped by a yellow star and crescent in the original version, later replaced by the Johor Royal Crown in the 2019 version. Below the shield is a blue ribbon written with the council's motto – Berkhidmat, Berbudaya, Berwawasan (برخدمت، بربوديا، برواوسن, meaning Service, Cultured, Visionary) in Jawi Malay and the city's name in Romanised Malay – Bandaraya Johor Bahru (City of Johor Bahru).

Mayors of Johor Bahru(Datuk Bandar)

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#Name of MayorsTerm startTerm end
1.Dato' Hashim Yahya1 January 19945 September 2000
2.Datuk Johari Suratman6 September 200021 February 2003[17]
3.Datuk Wahid Dahlan22 February 200321 February 2006[18]
4.Dato' Dato' Haji Abdul Latiff Yusof22 February 200631 October 2006
5.Dato' Naim Nasir1 November 200631 July 2009
6.Haji Mohd Jaffar Awang1 August 20097 August 2011
7.Haji Burhan Amin8 August 20112 June 2013
8.Dato' Haji Ismail Karim3 June 201313 April 2014
9.Dato' Haji Abdul Rahman Mohamed Dewam21 April 201415 August 2015
10.Haji A. Rahim Bin Haji Nin16 August 201522 October 2017
11.Dato’ Haji Amran bin A Rahman23 October 201714 November 2019
12.Dato’ Haji Azhari bin Daud17 November 201914 August 2021
13.Dato’ Haji Mohd Noorazam bin Dato' Haji Osman[19][20]15 August 20212 January 2025
14.Dato’ Haji Mohd Haffiz bin Haji Ahmad[21]3 January 2025Present

Organisation chart

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Mayor of Johor Bahru(Datuk Bandar)

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Dato’ Haji Mohd Haffiz bin Haji Ahmad

Secretary

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Haji Mohd Farid bin Hassan

Deputy Secretary

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Hajah Nazatul Shima bt Mohamad

Departments

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  • Management Services(Khidmat Pengurusan)
  • Treasury(Perbendaharaan)
  • Valuation(Penilaian)
  • Development Planning(Perancangan Pembangunan)
  • Engineering(Kejuruteraan)
  • Building(Bangunan)
  • Community Development(Pembangunan Masyarakat)
  • Health(Kesihatan)
  • Licensing(Pelesenan)
  • Urban Transportation(Pengangkutan Bandar)
  • Landscape(Landskap)
  • Enforcement(Penguatkuasaan)
  • Property Management(Pengurusan Harta)
  • Information Technology(Teknologi Maklumat)

Units

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  • Law(Undang-undang)
  • Internal Audit(Audit Dalam)
  • Integrity and Administration Modernisation(Integriti dan Permodenan Pentadbiran)
  • Corporate & Public Relations (Korporat & Perhubungan Awam)
  • One Stop Centre(Pusat Sehenti)
  • Smart City(Bandar Pintar)

Branch

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  • Commissioner of Building(Pesuruhjaya Bangunan)

Administration areas (zones)

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As of 2025, Johor Bahru is divided into 24 zones represented by 24 councillors to act as mediators between residents and the city council.[22][23][24] The councillors for the 1 April 2024 to 31 December 2025 session are as below:

ZoneCouncillorPolitical affiliation
Desa CemerlangA Aziz AhmadUMNO
Bandar Baru UDAYahya JaafarUMNO
KempasAbd Rashid KasmanUMNO
Mount AustinNg Yew AikMCA
Taman Abad/Wadi HanaG Jayasilan GopalMIC
Bakar BatuAbu Talib AliasUMNO
Permas Jaya/Teluk JawaAbdul Latiff IsmailUMNO
Danga Bay (Teluk Danga)Pannir SelvamMIC
Taman Johor Jaya/Taman RintingChan San SanMCA
City Centre (Bandar)Syeikh Ahmad Nafiq AlFirdaousUMNO
Setia AustinTeow Chia LingMCA
Desa HarmoniMohd Khairul Azlan SulongUMNO
Austin DutaYou Jeat XiongMCA
StulangBong Seng HengMCA
Taman MolekChong See MingMCA
Majidee Malay Village/Taman SuriaMohamad Isamuddin Mohamad IsaUMNO
LarkinAbdul Gafar SudinUMNO
TiramFauzi FaizalUMNO
Bandar Dato' Onn/Kangkar TebrauSiti Khairunnisa RuslanUMNO
Taman DayaNordin OmarUMNO
Pelangi IndahFadilah SuradiUMNO
Taman Pelangi/Taman SentosaNg Lied YingMCA
Kebun TehNgoh Wei ChingMCA
TampoiAhmad Al Mubarak Mohamed KunyiUMNO

Branch office

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See also

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References

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  1. ^"Singapore Exchange-listed Astaka Holdings hands Menara MBJB to Johor Bahru's City Council a year ahead of schedule"(PDF).astaka.com.my. 2 January 2020.
  2. ^"MBJB Tower Info".drive.google.com.
  3. ^"Sejarah dan Warisan (History and Heritage)".geojb.gov.my.
  4. ^"Pejabat Pos Besar Facebook".
  5. ^"30 tahun Johor Bahru Berdaya Huni" [30 years of livable Johor Bahru](PDF).mbjb.gov.my.
  6. ^"25 tahun Johor Bahru Jubli Perak Melakar Kegemilangan" [25 years of Excellence Johor Bahru Silver Jubilee](PDF).mbjb.gov.my.
  7. ^"State capital set to become a vibrant commercial hub".New Straits Times. 1 January 1994.
  8. ^"Latar Belakang".mbjb.gov.my.
  9. ^"Info MBJB"(PDF).mbjb.gov.my.
  10. ^"MBIP 2018 edition".
  11. ^"YBJB Introduction".ybjb.org.my.
  12. ^"Background (Total Area)".Johor Bahru City Council. Archived fromthe original on 22 August 2015. Retrieved22 August 2015.
  13. ^"Framework of National Architectural Identity of Public Administration Buildings: A Case Study of Majlis Bandaraya Johor Bahru (MBJB) Tower".
  14. ^"MBJB Annual Report 2017"(PDF).mbjb.gov.my.
  15. ^"Majlis Perasmian Menara Majlis Bandaraya Johor Bahru 24 Mac 2022".mbjb.gov.my. 24 March 2022.
  16. ^"Main office and branch offices of MBJB".mbjb.gov.my.
  17. ^Carol Murugiah,JB–the tropical garden city: Renowned as shopper's haven with new malls, pg 4, 8 April 2001,New Sunday TimesSpecial (Sultan of Johor's Birthday)
  18. ^Wahid appointed new JB Datuk Bandar ..PX: Wahid: Vast experience., 8 February 2003,New Straits Times
  19. ^"Sesi 'Clock In' Datuk Bandar MBJB Ke 11 Tuan Haji Amran bin A.Rahman".Johor Bahru City Council (in Malay). 23 July 2018. Archived fromthe original on 28 June 2022. Retrieved23 July 2018.
  20. ^"Mayor's Profile". Johor Bahru City Council. Archived fromthe original on 3 September 2015. Retrieved3 September 2015.
  21. ^"Setinggi-tinggi Tahniah dan Selamat Datang". 3 January 2025.
  22. ^"Profil Ahli Majlis".mbjb.gov.my.
  23. ^"Zon Ahli Majlis (Councillor Zones)".geojb.gov.my.
  24. ^"E Directory".mbjb.gov.my.

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