Supervision and Service Directorate
The ADD supervisory and service directorate is a central administrative authority of the state of Rhineland-Palatinate with its headquarters in Trier .
The ADD has existed in its current form since 2000 and acts as an intermediary between the state government and local self-government. In this function, the ADD performs communal, sovereign and social tasks. She acts as a school supervisor as well as in the fields of agriculture, viticulture and business law.
The ADD was created in 2000 as part of the restructuring through the administrative reform from the then district governments of the three administrative districts ( Koblenz , Rheinhessen-Pfalz , Trier ). In contrast to the administrative districts that were dissolved in 1999, the ADD's tasks are not only based on regional, but also on the functional bundling of tasks and responsibilities.
The headquarters of the ADD is the Electoral Palace in Trier, to which the publicly accessible palace garden adjoins. The state of Rhineland-Palatinate initiated the reconstruction after the war until 1956 and continues to use the palace today, initially as the seat of the then Trier district government and since 2000 as the headquarters of the supervisory and service directorate.
The sister authorities of the ADD are the Structure and Approval Directorate SGD North in Koblenz and SGD South in Neustadt an der Weinstrasse, which both perform various tasks for their part of the country and are responsible for some tasks nationwide.
Supervision and Service Directorate |
|
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State level | country |
founding | 2000 |
Headquarters | trier |
Authority management | Thomas Linnertz (SPD) |
Web presence | www.add.rlp.de |
organization
president
The ADD is headed by a President who is appointed by the Prime Minister. The president of the ADD is supported by a vice-president. Both people are political officials .
President of the ADD:
- January 2000 - October 2000: Heinrich Studentkowski ( SPD )
- October 2000 - September 2011: Josef Peter Mertes (SPD)
- October 2011 - May 2016: Dagmar Barzen (SPD)
- since June 2016: Thomas Linnertz (SPD)
Vice Presidents:
- October 2015 to May 2016: Anna Köbberling (SPD)
- since June 2016: Begoña Hermann (SPD)
Authority building
There are initially four departments subordinate to the President. These are each subdivided into several sections.
Each department has a department head who is superordinate to all departments and is therefore responsible and authorized to make decisions for all departments.
Departments of the ADD
Department 1: Central tasks
The Central Services department sees itself as a modern service provider both within the authority and externally. It equips the specialist departments of ADD with personnel and logistics. The ADD is responsible for administrative and legal assistance between the FRG and Austria or for the recognition of school qualifications obtained abroad.
- Subdivision of the department into the following sections
- Cross-border cooperation - Europe
- EU funding program - Interreg 5a Greater Region
- ADD press office
- Central tasks, awards, honors, etc. Awards and honors, state symbols
- HR management
- Claims settlement office Koblenz
- Vocational training
- Information technology (IT)
- Internal Market Information System (IMI)
Department 2: Municipal and sovereign tasks, social issues
Municipal and sovereign tasks, as well as social issues, are diverse and comprehensive subject areas in which the responsibilities of the ADD range from the direct municipal supervision of the districts, urban districts to the ordnance disposal service. As a state-wide foundation authority, ADD advises on all questions relating to the establishment of a foundation. The processing of naturalizations and the creation of apostilles is also a field of activity of the ADD. As a state-wide regulatory authority, it supports the municipal regulatory authorities and ensures compliance with collection rights , gun laws and the handling of fighting dogs. In addition, there are further responsibilities in the area of urban renewal, monument protection, village renewal, the investment stock and the promotion of sports facilities. The ADD offers the citizens as well as the local authorities services in many areas of public life and administration.
- Subdivision of the department into the following sections
- Municipal supervision
- Municipal development, sport, monument protection
- Experimental housing and urban development
- Competition - Our village has a future -
- Village renewal
- Urban renewal
- Investment stock
- Promotion of the construction of sports, play and leisure facilities
- Fire and disaster control / rescue service
- Public order, sovereign affairs, wages office for foreign armed forces
- Social affairs, youth, family, refugee affairs
- Foundations
- Ordnance clearance service
- Reception facility for asylum seekers
- Detention facility for persons obliged to leave the country Ingelheim
Department 3: Schools
The ADD school department is responsible for almost 1,600 schools and looks after more than 41,000 teachers.
- Subdivision of the department into the following sections
- School structure development and school development planning
- Application procedures and job postings at schools in Rhineland-Palatinate
- All-day schools
- School inspection
- Applications and information
- Grants and grants
- Recognition of foreign certificates
- Scientific investigations
- International Relations
- Equality between women and men in schools
- Teacher Health Project
- Extended Self-Employment Project (PES)
- Free teaching facilities
- School sports
Department 4: Agriculture, Viticulture , Business Law
Agricultural supervision serves consumer safety and environmental protection. The creation of agricultural products should adhere to legal requirements. It is the duty of the tax auditors at ADD to monitor these and to provide farmers with professional advice.
The EU, the federal government and the state of Rhineland-Palatinate support the structural adjustment process in agriculture with public aid. A system of legal assistance and administrative controls has been set up to ensure that this aid is provided across the country according to uniform standards and that the financial interests of the EU and the country are also protected. The ADD supports the licensing offices (district administrations) within the framework of technical supervision in all phases of the individual application procedures and thus guarantees a uniform implementation of these funding procedures in RLP .
In addition, the ADD promotes the development and strengthening of rural areas through various funding instruments and projects of the EU, the federal government and the state of Rhineland-Palatinate. These include B. Leader, Natura2000 and broadband funding. The aim is a sustainable development with equal consideration of the social, economic and ecological concerns of the region. ADD has a wide range of tasks in the areas of business law, price monitoring and economic security. The price review of public contracts, expert opinions, award reviews, craft and trade law, the establishment and tendering of districts for the activity of district chimney sweeps and the shop opening law are mentioned here as examples.
- Subdivision of the department into the following sections
- Agriculture and viticulture
- Agricultural supervision
- Agricultural funding and veterinary inspection service
- Rural development
- Business law and price monitoring, food security
- Current figures from the food industry / price development on the slaughter cattle markets
- Spruchstelle for land consolidation
Web links
Individual evidence
- ^ Trier Science Alliance »Supervision and Service Directorate Trier (ADD). Retrieved August 25, 2019 .
- ↑ Actively shaping safety and health in the supervisory and service directorate. March 19, 2019, accessed on August 25, 2019 (German).
- ↑ Responsible bodies according to the contract between the Federal Republic of Germany and the Republic of Austria on administrative and legal assistance in administrative matters of May 31, 1988 (Federal Law Gazette 1990 II p. 358) in the Federal Republic of Germany (as of January 3, 2005). Retrieved August 25, 2019 .
- ↑ GLS Berlin: Recognition of international school qualifications in Germany. Retrieved on August 25, 2019 (German).