Gmina






Division of Poland into gminy










The gmina (Polish pronunciation [ˈɡmina], plural gminy [ˈɡminɨ]) is the principal unit of the administrative division of Poland, similar to a municipality. As of 2010 there were 2,478 gminy throughout the country.[1] The word gmina derives from the German word Gemeinde, meaning "community".


The gmina has been the basic unit of territorial division in Poland since 1974, when it replaced the smaller gromada (cluster). There are three types of gminy:




  1. urban gmina (Polish: gmina miejska) consisting of just one city or town,

  2. mixed urban-rural gmina (Polish: gmina miejsko-wiejska) consisting of a town and surrounding villages and countryside; and


  3. rural gmina (Polish: gmina wiejska) consisting only of villages and countryside (occasionally of just one village).


Some rural gminy have their seat in a town which is outside the gmina's division. For example, the rural Gmina Augustów is administered from the town of Augustów, but does not include the town, as Augustów is an urban type gmina in its own right.


The legislative and controlling body of each gmina is the elected municipal council (rada gminy), or in a town: rada miasta (town assembly). Executive power is held by the directly elected mayor of the municipality, called wójt in rural gminy, burmistrz in most urban and urban-rural gminy, or prezydent in towns with more than 400,000 inhabitants and some others which traditionally use the title. A gmina may create auxiliary units (jednostki pomocnicze), which play a subordinate administrative role. In rural areas these are called sołectwa, in towns they may be dzielnice or osiedla and in an urban-rural gmina, the town itself may be designated as an auxiliary unit. For a complete listing of all the gminy in Poland, see List of Polish gminas.




Contents






  • 1 Types of administrative tasks and objectives


    • 1.1 Own objectives


    • 1.2 Commissioned tasks




  • 2 Overall number of gminy by type


  • 3 Largest and smallest gminy


  • 4 References


  • 5 External links





Types of administrative tasks and objectives


Each gmina carries out two types of tasks: its own tasks and commissioned ones. Own tasks are public tasks exercised by self-government, which serve to satisfy the needs of the community. The tasks can be twofold:



  • compulsory – where the municipality cannot decline to carry out the tasks, and must set up a budget to carry them out in order to provide the inhabitants with the basic public benefits

  • optional – where the municipality can carry them out in accordance with available budgetary means, set out only to specific local needs (on the gmina's own responsibility and budget).



Own objectives


Own high objectives include matters such as spatial harmony, real estate management, environmental protection and nature conservation, water management, country roads, public streets, bridges, squares and traffic systems, water supply systems and source, the sewage system, removal of urban waste, water treatment, maintenance of cleanliness and order, sanitary facilities, dumps and council waste, supply of electric and thermal energy and gas, public transport, health care, welfare, care homes, subsidised housing, public education, cultural facilities including public libraries and other cultural institutions, historic monuments conservation and protection, the sports facilities and tourism including recreational grounds and devices, marketplaces and covered markets, green spaces and public parks, communal graveyards, public order and safety, fire and flood protection with equipment maintenance and storage, maintaining objects and devices of the public utility and administrative buildings, pro-family policy including social support for pregnant women, medical and legal care, supporting and popularising the self-government initiatives and cooperation within the commune including with non-governmental organizations, interaction with regional communities from other countries, etc.



Commissioned tasks


Commissioned tasks cover the remaining public tasks resulting from legitimate needs of the state, commissioned by central government for the units of local government to implement. The tasks are handed over on the basis of statutory by-laws, charters and regulations, or by way of agreements between the self-government units and central-government administration.



Overall number of gminy by type





























































































































Number of gminy by voivodeship

Voivodeship

LS

KP

LBL

LBS

ŁD

LP

MS

OP

SK

PD

PM

SL

ŚWK

WM

GP

WP

Poland
Urban gminy
36
17
20
9
18
15
35
3
16
13
25
49
5
16
19
11
307
Urban-rural gminy
55
35
22
33
25
43
50
32
31
24
17
22
26
33
90
52
588
Rural gminy
78
92
171
41
134
124
229
36
113
81
81
96
71
67
117
51
1,584

Total gminy
169
144
213
83
177
182
314
71
160
118
123
167
102
116
226
114
2,479
of which: rural gminy with their seat outside the gmina
14
13
17
5
15
9
15
0
12
12
13
0
1
15
11
8
160


Abbreviations used for voivodeships:
LS: Lower Silesian Voivodeship, KP: Kuyavian-Pomeranian Voivodeship, LBL: Lublin Voivodeship, LBS: Lubusz Voivodeship,
ŁD: Łódź Voivodeship, LP: Lesser Poland Voivodeship, MS: Masovian Voivodeship, OP: Opole Voivodeship,
SK: Subcarpathian Voivodeship, PD: Podlaskie Voivodeship, PM: Pomeranian Voivodeship, SL: Silesian Voivodeship,
ŚWK: Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship, WM: Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, GP: Greater Poland Voivodeship, WP: West Pomeranian Voivodeship.



Largest and smallest gminy











































































LARGEST Population (2006 estimate) Land area in km² Population density
per km²
Urban

Warsaw (1,697,596)

Warsaw (517.22)

Świętochłowice (4,156.80)
Rural

Gmina Chełmiec (24,344)

Gmina Wałcz (574.89)

Gmina Buczkowice (542.70)
Urban-rural

Gmina Piaseczno (61,525)

Gmina Pisz (633.69)

Gmina Wołomin (801.69)
Town in urban-rural gmina

Gmina Nysa: Nysa (47,545)

Gmina Szczytna: Szczytna (80.38)

Gmina Swarzędz: Swarzędz (3,469.23)
Rural part of urban-rural gmina

Gmina Wieliczka: rural part (28,864)

Gmina Pisz: rural part (623.61)

Gmina Świątniki Górne: rural part (407.86)
SMALLEST Population (2006 estimate) Land area in km² Population density
per km²
Urban

Krynica Morska (1,364)

Górowo Iławeckie (3.32)

Krynica Morska (11.74)
Rural

Gmina Cisna (1,663)

Gmina Jejkowice (7.59)

Gmina Lutowiska (4.63)
Urban-rural

Gmina Nowe Warpno (1,559)

Gmina Świątniki Górne (20.35)

Gmina Nowe Warpno (7.88)
Town in urban-rural gmina

Gmina Wyśmierzyce: Wyśmierzyce (892)

Gmina Stawiszyn: Stawiszyn (0.99)

Gmina Suraż: Suraż (28.94)
Rural part of urban-rural gmina

Gmina Nowe Warpno: rural part (363)

Gmina Suchedniów: rural part (15.54)

Gmina Nowe Warpno: rural part (2.09)


References





  1. ^ Central Statistical Office of Poland Archived 2007-07-11 at the Wayback Machine., January 1, 2006. (in Polish)




  • Official report from the Central Statistical Office of Poland dated January 1, 2006, (pages 49–151, in Polish)


External links















Popular posts from this blog

Eastern Orthodox Church

Zagreb

Understanding the information contained in the Deep Space Network XML data?