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Subsistence Allowances For Urban Residents In Guizhou Province Approaches

Original Language Title: 贵州省城市居民最低生活保障办法

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(Health No. 66 of 9 May 2003 of the People's Government of Honour, 10 April 2003)

Article 1 regulates the minimum living security of the urban population in order to guarantee the basic right to life of the urban population, and establishes this approach in line with the provisions of the Minimum Living Guarantee Regulations for the Urban Resident and the relevant laws, regulations.
In the administrative region of the province, urban residents holding non-agricultural households have the lowest living security of urban residents, who live in common life below the minimum standard of living for local urban residents.
Article 3 Minimum living security for urban residents is governed by the principle of guaranteeing basic living for the population; the principles of equity, justice, openness and territorial management.
It was encouraged to save and provide social assistance.
Article IV Minimum living guarantees for the urban population are responsible for all levels of government.
The Provincial Government's Civil Affairs Department is responsible for the management of minimum living guarantees for the entire province's urban population, and the administration of minimum living guarantees for the urban population in this administrative area is vested in the civilian sector.
Street offices and communes (communes) are responsible for the first instance of the applicant and the issuance of minimum living guarantees.
The Community Resident Council is entrusted by the street Office or the People's Government to assume the day-to-day management and service of minimum living guarantees for the urban population.
Article 5
(i) The financial sector should allocate in full budgetary terms the minimum cost of living security for urban residents;
(ii) Statistics, prices should be aligned with the measurement of the minimum standard of living for urban residents in the civil service;
(iii) The management sector, such as education, health, land resources, construction, labour security, personnel, business, tax, public safety, family planning, and self-employment, fuel, electricity, etc., should be given the minimum living security of the urban population, in accordance with the relevant provisions;
(iv) Supervision, auditing and auditing of the management of minimum living guarantees for urban residents.
Article 6. Minimum living security funds for urban residents are prepared by the Civil Affairs Department of the above-mentioned People's Government, in accordance with the approved guaranteed funds, by the same-ranking Government's financial sector, and included in the financial social security grant, with special funds.
Social organizations and individuals are encouraged to contribute and fund minimum living guarantees for urban residents. Contributions are included in the financial social security grant recipients, all of which are allocated to the minimum living security fund for local urban residents.
Article 7. Minimum living guarantees for the urban population, which are approved by the Government of the Principality and published upon the request of the Government of the People at the highest level, will be implemented in the same sectors as finance, statistics, prices, depending on the cost of maintaining the basic life of the local urban population.
The minimum standard of living for urban residents should be adjusted in the light of changes in prices necessary for local life and the living conditions of the people. Adjustments to the safeguards standards are reapproved in accordance with the preceding paragraph.
Article 8 requires a minimum living guarantee for the urban population, which should be based on a family unit, by the head of household, to submit written requests to the street office or to the communes (communes), either through a community resident council at the place of the household, without the establishment of the Community Residential Commission, where the head of the head of the household can submit written requests directly to the street office or the commune government.
Article 9. The heads of households shall make the following materials when applying for the minimum living security of the urban population:
(i) Applications;
(ii) Family certificates;
(iii) Relevant evidence concerning the income of family members.
State agencies, businesses, business units and social groups have an obligation to give real and accurate income certificates to workers who are in difficulty in this unit.
Article 10. Authorization of the applicant's family:
(i) Approval of a resident's family name;
(ii) Families who are separated from their families, who are present in the streets or in the town of the commune (communes) government, receive the relevant proof that they are authorized by the Office of the streets of the household or by the Government of the commune;
(iii) The applicant's family has an agricultural household with the approval of family members with a non-agricultural population;
(iv) Children who live in school or are unable to live independently, with their parents or dependants, are still authorized to live together with their parents or dependants;
(v) Adult children who have been cohabited with their parents, who are not separated from their families, hardships for family life and need to apply for minimum living guarantees for the urban population, which may be approved by the sub-householding.
Article 11. The family income of the applicant is the sum of the monetary and in-kind income of all family members living jointly, including the following:
(i) Wages, awards, subsidies, allowances and various types of labour income;
(ii) Leave, basic pension, basic cost-of-living and unemployment insurance;
(iii) Saving deposits and interest, equity, other value securities and dividends;
(iv) Income earned on rental or sale of housing and other household assets;
(v) Urban construction needs to be dismantled, relocated to various reparations and subsidies for countries, groups, businesses and societies;
(vi) Reimbursement, maintenance or dependency payments by a statutory dependants, a dependent person or a dependent person;
(vii) Succession of heritage and acceptance of grants;
(viii) The income of family members of the agricultural household, which is accounted for in the total household income;
(ix) After a one-time income from the Government or the enterprise unit less than the portion to be deducted according to the provisions, the average monthly household income is recorded on the basis of the local minimum living standards;
(x) Other income.
The following elements of Article 12 are not included in the income of the family:
(i) The various types of pension, care fees, health pensions and obligations enjoyed by the beneficiaries;
(ii) To make a special contribution to the State, society and the people, the award granted by the Government, and the honour allowance enjoyed after the retirement of the labour model at the provincial level;
(iii) Medical fees, care fees, one-time disability grant, disability support and funeral benefits for workers (public) injured, and one-time pension after death;
(iv) Scholarship, scholarships, bonuses, booby vouchers, child health benefits and awards granted by the Government and society;
(v) Interim social assistance and condolences.
Article 13 Persons who do not have employment and other income in the age of employment shall not be presumed to calculate their income on the basis of actual income.
Article XIV Street Offices, communes (communes) and community residents' councils are responsible for the minimum living security of urban residents, and should be surveyed, including through household surveys, field inspections, neighbouring visits and letters of access.
The applicant and the relevant units, organizations or individuals should be surveyed, if any.
The applicant and his family members are not cooperating or denied the investigation as a waiver.
Article 15. The Community Residents Commission shall make public coverage of the family population, household income, and the amount of relief, of the verified applicants.
Citizens contest the publication and should re-examine the verification and publication.
Article 16 Commodity Council verification of the basic situation of the applicant shall be completed within 10 working days of the date of receipt of the applicant's application; the applicant's separation may be extended at an appropriate time, but the extended period shall not exceed 15 working days.
Street offices, communes (communes) Governments should be reviewed within 10 working days from the date of receipt of the community dwellers' councils' submissions, and to report to the district-level Government's civil affairs sector. The civil affairs component of the commune government should be approved within 10 working days of the date of the report of the People's Government of the streets, the town. In order to meet conditions, a “minimum living guarantee” for the inhabitants of the city of Honduran Province was filed; for the purposes of the application in writing.
Article 17
(i) The possession of high-functioning consumer goods such as vehicles, mobile phones, motor vehicles, air conditioning and computers;
(ii) The per capita bank deposits and the value-added securities are above the local minimum standard of living;
(iii) The purchase of commodity houses or the construction of buildings for up to five years;
(iv) Until 5 years of departure from the home;
(v) A legal age of employment and a labour capacity that does not receive employment training organized by the concerned sector or two recommended employment within one year without justification;
(vi) In violation of family planning policies, social dependency payments are not paid by law;
(vii) Funding for children's optional school attendance;
(viii) There are offences such as cascacabo, drug abuse, which are not redirected by education;
(ix) Per capita income is less than the minimum standard of living, but the source of living has other channels to maintain the minimum standard of living.
Article 18
(i) Urban residents who have no means of life, have no labour capacity, cannot be determined by the dependants, dependants or dependants, who are in full accordance with the minimum living standards on the ground;
(ii) Other urban residents enjoy the difference between the per capita income of their family members and the local minimum living standards.
Article 19 Minimum living guarantees for urban residents are granted by the street offices, the communes (communes) in monetary form by month, or by local banks or postal savings branches.
Article 20 provides a dynamic management of the minimum living security of the urban population. The Civil Affairs Department, the Street Office, the People's Government, the Community Residential Commission should conduct, on a timely basis, the reduction, growth or suspension of the minimum living guarantees, in accordance with the security-related changes, as well as the award of the “minimum subsistence allowance” for urban residents in Hono Province, as scheduled.
The Minimum Living Guarantee Scheme for the Urban Residents of Honours Province was reviewed by a quarterly period of time, which was considered invalid.
Article 21 states the civil affairs sector and the street offices, the commune (communes) people's Government is required to establish a system of management for the minimum living security of the urban population, a statistical bank and statistical statements system.
Article 22 Residents who have the lowest living security certificate in the city of Honour can benefit from the following preferences:
(i) The public job descriptions affiliated to the labour security sector, which should give priority to employment under the same conditions for the purpose of achieving the legal age of employment and the right to work, as well as to the costs associated with job registration and payment;
(ii) The business sector should provide the necessary enabling and care for the safety of persons engaged in the exercise of their own business and, in accordance with the relevant laws, regulations and regulations;
(iii) Educational institutions should be exempted from charge at the level of compulsory education, and should be part of the school attendance at kindergartens, high schools, vocational secondary schools, technic schools, or adequate tuition;
(iv) National medical agencies should exempt from the general gateway rate and provide high-cost medical services;
(v) Housing management shall pay due relief to rents for housing guaranteed by urban residents;
(vi) Other administrative authorities and relevant units should formulate relevant preferential policies within their respective mandates.
Article 23 Guarantees shall fulfil the following obligations during the enjoyment of the minimum guaranteed treatment:
(i) When the income of family members changed, reports and clearances should be made available to street offices, communes (communes) and community residents' councils;
(ii) Changes in relocation at the household level should be implemented in accordance with the provisions of the new household registration sites, at the street offices in the place of the former family, in the town of the commune, in order to ensure that the standards are implemented in accordance with the provisions of the new household registry;
(iii) The attainment of the legal age of employment and the ability to work in the family members should take part in employment training organized by the relevant departments to receive employment and self-employment;
(iv) The public-private social services organized by the local community's committees, street offices, communes (communes) and the people's government should be involved in the attainment of the legal age of employment.
Article 24 Persons with minimum living security for the urban population are one of the following cases, which is not yet a crime, which is criticized by the civil affairs department of the commune people's Government or warnings, the time limit is being changed; the failure to renovate the minimum amount of living guarantees; and the risky, the recovery of the minimum living guarantees and the imposition of a fine of more than three times the amount of the driver:
(i) No obligation under article 23.
(ii) To use means of misstatement, concealment, falsification and deception of minimum living guarantees for urban residents;
(iii) In the absence of timely write-offs and procedures for family deaths, the minimum living guarantees of death continue to be paid.
Article 25
(i) Failure to complete the process of clearance, approval within the prescribed time frame, affecting the normal functioning of the minimum living security of the urban population, with adverse social consequences;
(ii) To grant minimum living guarantees in violation of statutory conditions and procedures;
(iii) The refusal to grant low-insurance payments to the guarantor that meets the minimum living guarantees;
(iv) To receive bribery, favour private fraud, and to change the minimum standard of living;
(v) Disample proof and material;
(vi) Corruption, misappropriation, default and the closure of minimum living guarantees.
Article 26