Government of Upper Bavaria

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Government of Upper Bavaria

Coat of arms of Bavaria.svg
State level government
position State funding authority
Supervisory authority Bavarian State Ministry of the Interior and for Integration
Headquarters Munich
Authority management District President Maria Els
Servants approx. 1,700
Web presence www.regierung.oberbayern.bayern.de

The government of Upper Bavaria is a medium-sized state authority based in Munich with around 1,700 employees from over 25 scientific disciplines. It coordinates for the Bavarian State Ministries at the Upper Bavarian level, advises and supervises 34 subordinate state authorities and awards grants for private and public projects amounting to over 500 million euros annually.

organization

The authority is divided into the following areas:

  • Presidium with the staff units P, S and Z
  • Area 1A: security, community and social affairs
  • Area 1B: Asylum, Central Immigration Office
  • Area 2: Economy, regional development and transport
  • Area 3: planning and construction
  • Area 4: schools
  • Area 5: Environment, health and consumer protection
  • Area 6: Food and Agriculture
  • Trade Inspectorate

On May 1, 2018, Maria Els took over the office of District President of Upper Bavaria from her predecessor Brigitta Brunner . From March 2013 to February 2017 Els already worked in the house as the government vice-president of Upper Bavaria before she took over the management of the department for central affairs at the Bavarian Ministry of the Interior. On June 18, 2018, Walter Jonas took over the office of Vice President of the Government of Upper Bavaria from his predecessor Andrea Degl.

Tasks and central responsibilities

The government is the intermediate authority in a three-tier administrative structure between the Bavarian State Ministries and the authorities of the lower tier (e.g. district offices ). The government bundles and coordinates the technical interests of the Bavarian State Ministries for the administrative region of Upper Bavaria . It grants state funding for private and public projects and is the state oversight of a large number of subordinate authorities and local authorities; it is also the objection authority.

For Bavaria or parts of Bavaria, centralized tasks for the government of Upper Bavaria are:

Planned relocation and spin-off of a district of Munich

In January 2020, the Bavarian state government announced that further relocations of authorities are planned to relieve pressure on the Munich metropolitan area and to strengthen rural areas as part of the Bavarian state government's home and relocation strategy of 2015. In addition, a separate administrative district of Munich is to be spun off from the previous administrative district of Upper Bavaria by 2023. The government of Upper Bavaria in particular is said to be severely affected by this: Only 600 of the previous jobs are to remain in the state capital, and 500 jobs each are to be relocated to the Ingolstadt area and to the Rosenheim area according to the plans of the Bavarian state government.

history

The government of Upper Bavaria came into being with the reorganization of Bavaria in 1808 as the Royal General Commissioner of the Isar District . The Isar District was renamed Upper Bavaria in 1837.

Authority heads were:

  1. 1808–1810: Joseph Maria von Weichs , general commissioner of the Isarkkreis
  2. 1810–1819: Ferdinand von Schleich , General Commissioner of the Isar District
  3. 1819–1831: Gabriel Bernhard von Widder , Commissioner General and President of the Government
  4. 1832–1840: Carl Graf von Seinsheim , Commissioner General and President of the Government, from 1837 President of the Government
  5. 1840–1847: Joseph Hörmann von Hörbach
  6. 1847–1848: Bernhard von Godin
  7. 1848–1849: Theodor von Zwehl
  8. 1849–1852: Wilhelm von Benning
  9. 1852: August Lothar Graf von Reigersberg00000
  10. 1853–1870: Philipp Freiherr von Zu Rhein
  11. 1870: Alois von Hermann00000
  12. 1870–1875: Theodor von Zwehl
  13. 1876–1880: Hugo von Herman
  14. 1880–1882: Maximilian von Feilitzsch
  15. 1882–1894: Sigmund von Pfeufer
  16. 1894–1897: Friedrich von Ziegler
  17. 1897–1902: Julius von Auer
  18. 1902–1905: Josef Nikolaus von Schraut
  19. 1905–1917: Anton von Halder
  20. 1917–1924: Gustav von Kahr
  21. 1924–1933: Ludwig von Knözinger
  22. 1933–1934: Robert Rauck , acting as representative
  23. 1934–1943: Heinrich Gareis , entrusted with the management of the business from 1934 to 1940, from April 18, 1940 district president
  24. 1943–1945: Franz Mayr
  25. 1945–1949: Ludwig Osthelder
  26. 1949–1950: Richard Balles
  27. 1950–1952: Heinrich Kneuer
  28. 1952–1962: Johann Mang
  29. 1962–1974: Adam Deinlein
  30. 1975-1994: Raimund Eberle
  31. 1994–2005: Werner-Hans Böhm
  32. 2005–2016: Christoph Hillenbrand
  33. 2016–2018: Brigitta Brunner
  34. since May 1, 2018: Maria Els

Office buildings and offices

Office building of the government of Upper Bavaria (Maximilianstrasse 39)

The representative office building in Munich, Maximilianstrasse 39 , in which the head office is located, was built between 1856 and 1864 as part of the construction of Maximilianstrasse by the architect Friedrich Bürklein in the neo-Gothic , so-called Maximilian style, which is characteristic of the street . Other offices in Munich are located in Bayerstraße, Lazarettstraße, Heßstraße and Hofmannstraße.

Other offices are in Ingolstadt , at Memmingen Airport and Munich Airport .

Others

The government publishes the following official gazettes:

  • Upper Bavarian Official Gazette (OBABl; since 1774) - Official announcements by the government of Upper Bavaria, the Upper Bavaria district, the regional planning associations and the special-purpose associations in Upper Bavaria
  • Upper Bavarian School Gazette (OSA; since April 1920)

See also

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Curriculum vitae of the District President Maria Els , accessed on December 2, 2019
  2. district government. In: www.regierung.oberbayern.bayern.de. Retrieved January 22, 2020 .
  3. ^ The ROB as an employer. In: www.regierung.oberbayern.bayern.de. Retrieved December 2, 2019 .
  4. ^ Organization plan of the government of Upper Bavaria. In: www.regierung.oberbayern.bayern.de. Retrieved December 2, 2019 .
  5. Maria Els new district president of Upper Bavaria. In: www.stmi.bayern.de. Retrieved May 3, 2018 .
  6. ^ Change in the government of Upper Bavaria - Walter Jonas succeeds Andrea Degl. In: www.stmi.bayern.de. Retrieved July 10, 2018 .
  7. About us. In: www.regierung.oberbayern.bayern.de. Retrieved January 15, 2020 .
  8. ^ Central responsibilities of the government of Upper Bavaria. In: www.regierung.oberbayern.bayern.de. Retrieved December 2, 2019 .
  9. authorities relocations 2015. In: www.stmfh.bayern.de. Retrieved January 15, 2020 .
  10. Relocation of authorities: 3,000 jobs and a few surprises. In: www.br.de. Retrieved January 15, 2020 .
  11. Söder wants to make Munich the eighth administrative district in Bavaria. In: www.sueddeutsche.de. Retrieved January 15, 2020 .
  12. ^ History. In: www.regierung.oberbayern.bayern.de. Retrieved December 2, 2019 .
  13. ^ The regional presidents of Upper Bavaria from 1808 until today. In: www.regierung.oberbayern.bayern.de. Retrieved December 2, 2019 .
  14. Bavaria Portal: Government of Upper Bavaria department Ingolstadt. Bavarian State Ministry for Digital, accessed on August 25, 2020 .
  15. Service and branch offices. Government of Upper Bavaria, accessed on August 25, 2020 .
  16. ^ Official announcements of the government of Upper Bavaria. In: www.regierung.oberbayern.bayern.de. Retrieved December 2, 2019 .

Coordinates: 48 ° 8 '18.4 "  N , 11 ° 35' 9.5"  E