Department of Home Affairs and Sport
Authority |
|
---|---|
State level | country |
position | Supreme state authority |
Headquarters | Hamburg |
Authority management | Senator Andy Grote
President of the Interior and Sports Authority |
Budget volume | EUR 1.191 billion (2019) |
Web presence | www.hamburg.de |
The Interior and Sports Authority ( BIS , interior authority for short) is one of eleven specialist authorities of the Senate of the Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg and is responsible for domestic and sports policy in the Hanseatic city.
The current Interior Senator and President of the Authority has been Andy Grote ( SPD ) since January 20, 2016 . He is supported by two state councilors : Bernd Krösser for the home affairs and Christoph Holstein for sport.
The Ministry of the Interior and Sport is based in the Kontorhausviertel at Johanniswall 4.
history
The current interior authority was created in 1962 from the merger of the former police authority with the state office for the protection of the constitution, the state statistical office, the office for district administration (now part of the tax authority ) and other departments from other authorities.
The history of the police authority goes back to the year 1814, when after the end of the French occupation all police competencies were bundled in a single authority for the first time. This was headed by two senators as police officers who were exempt from the usual annual rotation in the Senate offices. From 1875 they were supported by a civil servant "Police Council" (later Police Director, from 1912: Police President).
After the Hamburg constitution of 1860 and the separation of the police and the judiciary, the authority had to give up some competences in criminal prosecution and civil law. But even after that, their area of responsibility was broad and, until the time of the Weimar Republic, included not only the general order and protection police but also numerous administrative areas such as B. Construction and commercial police, welfare or health police, alien and servant police, port police.
During the time of National Socialism , the Hamburg police were "passed" through the law on the rebuilding of the Reich in 1934 and subordinated to the Reichsführer SS and chief of the German police .
After 1945 the police were reorganized under the supervision of the British military government . Numerous "administrative police" of the pre-war period were abolished and the authority of the authority was limited to the core area of security, order and the fight against crime, which is usual today.
organization
The Ministry of the Interior and Sports is divided into five offices:
- Office for Internal Administration and Planning (including State Sports Office)
- Hamburg police
- Fire Department Hamburg
- Central residents' office (EZA, Central Immigration Office)
- State Office for the Protection of the Constitution
The following are also subordinate to the authority:
Web links
- Homepage of the Ministry of the Interior and Sport
- Organization chart of the Department of Home Affairs and Sport
Individual evidence
- ↑ Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg - Tax Authority : Section 8.1 Authority for Internal Affairs and Sport. In: Budget 2019/2020. Retrieved October 17, 2019 .
- ↑ 50 years of the Interior Authority. May 1, 2012, accessed May 26, 2015 .
- ^ Foreword to the finding aid of inventory 331-1 I Police Authority I in the State Archives of the Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg, accessed on May 26, 2015.
- ↑ BIS organization chart , as of April 20, 2015.
- ↑ Structure of the Ministry of the Interior and Sport , accessed on May 26, 2015.
- ↑ http://www.hamburg.de/lbv
- ↑ http://www.hamburg.de/bos-digitalfunk