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Suzhou Meteorological Disaster Prevention Measures

Original Language Title: 苏州市气象灾害防御办法

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Meteorological disaster defence in Sus State

(Adopted by the 18th ordinary meeting of the Government of Sus State on 2 December 2013, No. 132 of the People's Government Order No. 132 of 31 December 2013, effective 1 March 2014)

In order to strengthen meteorological disaster defence, avoid, mitigate the damage caused by meteorological disasters, guarantee the security of people's property, promote economic and social development, and develop this approach in line with the laws, regulations, regulations, regulations, regulations, regulations and regulations of the Meteorological Disaster Assessment in the Province of the People's Republic of China.

This approach applies to defence activities such as the prevention, monitoring, forecasting, early warning and emergency disposal of meteorology disasters within the city's administration.

The approach refers to weather-related disasters, which are caused by cyclones, storms, typhoons, low temperatures, droughts, hydro, ice, ices, denunciation, sands, swings, ventilation, and drought.

Article III. Meteorological disaster defence is guided by the principle of people-centred, scientific defence, prevention of ownership, anti-combination and implementation of government-led, sectoral alliances and social participation mechanisms.

Article IV. Governments of the city, district level (zone) should strengthen the organizational leadership of meteorological disaster defence efforts, establish integrated coordination mechanisms and organizational systems for sound meteorological disaster defence, integrate meteorological disaster defence efforts into the planning of economic and social development of their nationals at this level, and include requirements in the current financial budget.

Urban, district-level (zone) meteorological authorities are responsible for monitoring, forecasting, early warning, assessment and man-made weather management of meteorology disasters in the current administrative region; guide related meteorological disaster defence activities; and assist the relevant sectors in monitoring, forecasting, early warning and disaster mitigation.

Other relevant sectors of the Government of the city, district level (zone) share their responsibilities in the area of meteorological disaster defence.

The Royal Government of the People's Republic of Sudang, which has no meteorological authorities, as well as the Sud State Industrial Parks, and the High-Level Regional Committee in Sus State, should clarify the relevant sectors responsible for weather disaster defence.

Article 5 Governments of the town (the Street Office) should identify personnel to carry out meteorological disaster defence knowledge advocacy, information transmission, implementation of defence measures, timely reporting on the occurrence of disasters, assist in the identification of disaster situations, guide the work of the village (resident) committee and business units on meteorological disaster defence.

The Village (HL) Commission should identify personnel to assist the Government of the Town (Obrica) in carrying out meteorological disaster defence.

Article 6. The Government of the people at the municipal, district level (zone) should incorporate meteorological disaster defence knowledge into the framework of action plans for the quality of science for all.

Relevant sectors, the media, business units should enhance the dissemination of meteorological disaster defence knowledge, raise public awareness of weather-related disasters and prevent risks, avoid disasters, save themselves, and inter-saving capacities.

Schools, scientific institutions, academic groups and relevant industry organizations are guided by the law by meteorological disaster defence education.

Article 7. Governments of the city, district level (zone) and their relevant sectors should encourage and support scientific and technical research on meteorological disaster defence, the introduction, diffusion and application of advanced meteorological disaster defence techniques and the upgrading of the science and technology levels of meteorological disaster defence.

Article 8 provides recognition and incentives to units and individuals that make a prominent contribution in the defence of meteorological disasters.

Article 9. Governments of the city, district level (zone) should organize meteorological authorities and relevant sectors to prepare meteorological disaster defence planning in the current administrative region, in line with the meteorological disaster defence planning of the people at the highest level, in conjunction with local meteorological disaster characteristics.

Article 10 Governments at all levels should develop meteorological disaster preparedness scenarios in the current administrative region, in line with the overall emergency preparedness and meteorological disaster defence planning of sudden events, in the context of local meteorological disasters, and report back to the Government of the people at the highest level.

The authorities should develop sectoral meteorological disaster response scenarios in conjunction with their respective responsibilities and report back to the Government of the people at this level.

The relevant units should establish meteorological disaster response scenarios in the light of the facts of the unit.

Article 11. Governments at all levels, relevant sectors should incorporate the Meteorological Disaster Emergency Response Team into the Emergency Relief System and strengthen emergency skills training, performance and equipment security.

Social organizations are encouraged to establish a volunteer for meteorological disaster response.

Meteorological authorities should conduct emergency response capacity training with relevant departments and units for personnel such as meteorological disaster response assistance and emergency volunteers.

Article 12. Governments of the urban, district-level municipalities (zone) should organize, in accordance with meteorological disaster defence planning, meteorological disasters and meteorology, derivative defence efforts in the relevant sectors, building defence facilities such as flooding, ventilation, protection forests, mine-clearing facilities and emergency shelters, reserve emergency response and seizure of disaster relief supplies and regularly inspect meteorological disaster defence facilities.

The Government of the people at the municipal, district level (zone) should build man-made weather facilities and organize man-made weather-affected weather operations in due course, in accordance with work needs such as high-war drought defence, atmospheric and water pollution control, forest fire risk control.

Meteorological authorities carry out man-made weather operations, and the sectors such as public safety should be assisted.

Article 14. The Government of the commune, district level (zone) has established a decentralized mechanism for agricultural insurance risk management, with government financial support, to encourage units and individuals to participate in meteorological disaster risk insurance.

The insurance agencies should conduct inspections and training of the insured person's disaster risk reduction facility and guide and organize the timely adoption of relevant defence measures by the insured person.

Article 15. When planning for rural and urban areas, focus areas or regional development planning are developed, the structure of the institution should organize climate-sensitization by meteorological authorities, which should serve as a basis for the preparation of relevant planning.

Article 16 builds projects that are required by law to carry out meteorological disaster assessments and should conduct meteorological disaster assessments in the light of the meteorological disaster risk regions in which the project is located.

The Meteorological Disaster Assessment Report, which was adopted by the evaluation, serves as the basis for project design. Building projects that are assessed to be at risk of meteorological disasters, adversely affect local climate or trigger meteorological disasters should be designed, constructed in accordance with the concluding observations of the Meteorological Disaster Assessment Report or other appropriate defence measures.

Article 17 Governments of the city, district level (zone) should strengthen facilities such as meteorological disaster monitoring systems, forecasting systems, early warning information dissemination systems and emergency disposal systems.

Article 18 Meteorological authorities should undertake joint monitoring and the establishment of a meteorological disaster monitoring information-sharing platform with the sectors of transport, water, land resources, agroforestry, environmental protection.

Meteorological authorities and the relevant sectors should increase the density of monitoring facilities in priority areas such as urban areas, along the Giangang, along the Lake-Prince, the Clinical Industrial Zone, geological disaster-prone areas and agricultural parks.

The construction of large ports, highway and high urban roads should be accompanied by the design of specialized meteorological disaster monitoring facilities and meteorological disaster early warning facilities, such as large-scale ventilation, winds and projects.

Public information dissemination systems, such as urban, district-level (zone) people's Government and relevant departments, should have access to early warning and transmission functions for meteorological disasters.

Facilities such as sports stations, hospitals, schools, vehicle stations, terminals, orbital traffic, public libraries, public exhibitions (centres), museums, public recreational sites, emergency shelters, commercial sites (markets) and fuel-prone sites, agricultural parks, tourist landscapes (zones), construction of workplaces should be established to receive and broadcast meteorological information and to facilitate access to and transmission of disaster early warning information.

Article 20

Meteorological authorities should prepare specific plans for the detection of environmental protection at meteorological stations, including planning, land resources, and be integrated into rural and urban planning, with the approval of the HPR.

Meteorological authorities should redirect the meteorological stations in this administrative area to detect environmental protection requirements by transmitting the inputs of the same-level meteorological authorities in the sectors of development and reform, land resources, planning, radio management, environmental protection, etc. Construction projects that endanger the environmental protection of meteorology must not be approved.

Any unit or individual shall not intrus, destroy, unauthorized mobile meteorological disaster monitoring, early warning facilities shall not endanger the environment of meteorology and shall not be able to migrate their meteorological stations.

It is true that, as a result of the overall planning changes in cities (communes) or the need for national focus engineering construction, the relocation of meteorological stations should be carried out in accordance with the principle of pre-construction relocation.

In accordance with Article 22, the meteorological units of the city, the district level (zone) and the meteorological authorities shall, in accordance with their responsibilities, harmonize disaster weather alerts and meteorological disaster warning signals to society and update or release on the basis of weather changes in a timely manner. Other units and individuals shall not issue disaster weather alerts and meteorological disaster warning signals to society.

The media, such as radio, television, government portals, government microbopol, should be broadcast in an accurate manner within 15 minutes after notification of meteorological disaster warning signals belonging to meteorological authorities.

Other public media with real-time communications capacity should be aligned with the dissemination of meteorological disaster early warning information and ensure that information is received and disseminated. Other units with real-time transmission capacity are encouraged to participate in the dissemination of early warning information as required.

Electronic early warning signals and storms, road icemer warning signals, and other early warning signals that may lead to major meteor disasters, should be sent free of charge to the users of meteoral disaster early warning in the disaster early warning region after receiving meteorological disaster warning signals from meteorological authorities. Specific implementation rules are developed within one year of operation by meteorological authorities, in conjunction with the relevant sectors, telecommunications operators, and are presented to the Government of the people at this level.

Article 24 should accurately disseminate information on disaster weather alerts and early-warning of meteorological disasters, and indicate the name and timing of the information provided.

Article 25 Governments at the municipal, district and district levels (zone) should decide to initiate emergency pre-response and to carry out emergency response efforts, in accordance with disaster weather alerts, meteorological disaster early warning signals and meteorological disaster emergency preparedness standards.

After the end of the emergency response, all levels of the people's Government should organize a survey, statistical, assessment, emergency response summary, improved weather disaster preparedness and report on emergency response to the Government of the people at the highest level.

Citizens, legal persons or other organizations should assist local people's governments and meteorological authorities in conducting disaster response surveys.

Article 26 Violations of this approach are governed by the relevant laws, regulations and regulations.

Article 27 Abuse by meteorological authorities and other relevant departments and their staff, in favour of private fraud, and incentivism, is governed by the law by the unit or the superior authority responsible for the administrative disposition of the responsible supervisors and other persons directly responsible; constitutes a crime and is criminally criminalized by law.

The twenty-eighth approach was implemented effective 1 March 2014.