Agreed administrative community

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The agreed administrative community (VVG) is a form of intermunicipal cooperation in Baden-Württemberg . A municipality ( fulfilling municipality ) takes on the tasks of a municipality administration association (GVV). The agreed administrative community is not itself legally competent , it is not a corporation under public law and therefore also not a community association . Agreed administrative communities arise from a public law agreement .

history

The administrative communities were first introduced in Baden-Württemberg as part of the law to strengthen the administrative power of smaller communities of March 26, 1968, which was part of the regional reform in Baden-Württemberg . The First Act on Functional Reform of March 14, 1972 assigned the administrative communities a minimum set of tasks.

In 2007 there were 157 agreed administrative communities, to which 474 municipalities had come together.

structure

Agreed administrative communities consist of several neighboring municipalities of a common district , whereby each municipality can only belong to one administrative association (GVV or VVG).

A joint committee made up of representatives of the municipalities involved decides on the fulfillment tasks. The chairman of the joint committee is the mayor of the fulfilling municipality.

tasks

Section 61 of the Baden-Württemberg municipal code determines the scope of the tasks assigned ; Here there is no fundamental difference between municipal administration associations and agreed administrative communities.

An important point is that the fulfilling congregation provides the other member congregations with staff and advises them if necessary .

The tasks of the agreed administrative community are divided into "execution tasks", in which the fulfilling municipality acts on behalf of the other municipalities, and "fulfillment tasks", which it carries out under its own responsibility. The completion tasks include tasks related to the binding land-use planning ( development plan ), land regulation , urban development and building supervision as well as water maintenance and tax , cash and accounting transactions . The fulfillment tasks include the preparatory land-use planning ( land use plan ) and the assumption of the road construction load for the communal roads . Upon request, the fulfilling municipality can be assigned further tasks.

See also

Individual evidence

  1. a b § 59 Municipal Code (GemO) Baden-Württemberg
  2. Roger Kehle, Christian O. Steger: Together we are strong! Study by the municipal assembly of Baden-Württemberg on intermunicipal cooperation (IKZ) . In: Gemeindetag Baden-Württemberg (Hrsg.): The community. BWGZ . Magazine for cities and municipalities, city councils, local councils and local councils. Organ of the municipal assembly of Baden-Württemberg. tape 128 , no. 20 . Municipal Assembly of Baden-Württemberg, Stuttgart 2005, DNB  010696393 , OCLC 310956989 , p. 787 ( PDF [accessed December 6, 2008]).
  3. ^ Gerhard Waibel: Municipal constitution law Baden-Württemberg . 5th edition. W. Kohlhammer, Stuttgart 2007, ISBN 978-3-17-019726-8 , pp. 263 ( limited preview in Google Book search).
  4. ^ A b Gerhard Waibel: Municipal Constitutional Law Baden-Württemberg . 5th edition. W. Kohlhammer, Stuttgart 2007, ISBN 978-3-17-019726-8 , pp. 262 ( limited preview in Google Book search).
  5. § 60 Municipal Code (GemO) Baden-Württemberg
  6. Section 61, Paragraph 7 of the Municipal Code (GemO) Baden-Württemberg