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Administrative Measures For The Cleaning And Disinfection Of Public Health In Nanning City

Original Language Title: 南宁市公共用品清洗消毒卫生管理办法

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The laundering of public supplies in South Africa

(Adopted at the 112th ordinary meeting of the Twelfth People's Government of South Africa, 8 March 2011, No. 39 of the Decree No. 39 of 11 April 2011, published as from 1 June 2011)

Chapter I General

Article 1 ensures that public supplies are laundering of toxicity, prevents the spread of diseases, guarantees public health and public health safety, and develops this approach in line with laws, regulations, such as the People's Republic of China Act on the Control of Epidemiological Diseases, the Public Place Health Regulations.

Article 2, laundering of public supplies within the city's administration, is applicable.

Article 3 refers to public supplies referred to in this approach to public services in public places for use by the public, including the following items:

(i) Non-time textile items such as sing, perib (bir), hiding, dressing (wers), beds;

(ii) A non-one-time public use, such as cup kits, face basins, bricks, washing, ponding, bathybing basins (men), hidings, shoes;

(iii) Producing, charging, renovating (soft), public-use tools used by charging;

(iv) Clothing, McLurance, eye lens for consumer use;

(v) A non-one-time chairs in places such as the theatre, the Video (rooms), dance, music hall, public transport instruments, and a headboard;

(vi) horticulture facilities, pyrethroids, recreational tools;

(vii) A basket of purchases and hand-washing vehicles at commercial sites;

(viii) A centralized air conditioning system;

(ix) Other public supplies under laws, regulations and regulations.

The municipal health administration can adapt the types of public supplies in line with the needs of the sanitary epidemic and be made available to society after approval by the Government of the city.

Article IV.

(i) hotels, restaurants, hotels, hospitality, coffee, bars, tea;

(ii) Public bathrooms, hotels and philancies;

(iii) Site, Video (rooms), horticulture (rooms), dances, music offices;

(iv) Sports sites (consultations), swimmings (consultations), parks;

(v) Exhibits, museums, philanthropies, libraries;

(vi) Business (rooms), book shops;

(vii) Distinction rooms, waiting vehicles (airs, ship) and public transportation tools;

(viii) Reservations, clothing rental shops, etc.

Article 5 The municipal, district health administration is responsible for the supervision of the laundering of public supplies in the Territory. The sanitary administration in urban areas is responsible for monitoring the management of public supplies laundering in the region, in accordance with the responsibilities of municipalities and urban areas.

The administrations such as business, environmental protection, tourism, quality and transport are governed by their respective responsibilities.

Chapter II

Public supplies for use by the public should be consistent with the corresponding health standards and sanitation norms.

Article 7.

(i) Non-time textiles and cups, such as crickets, garbage, bed, should be replaced and eliminated.

(ii) A non-one-time public use, such as peripheral, face basin, brick, washing, pondering, bathybing basin (men), hiding, at least once a day.

(iii) Public supplies such as beds, trailers, etc. should be replaced and laundering of drugs, replacement of and laundering of public supplies such as beds, trailers, etc. for long-lasting passengers at least one week. More than three bes (including three spousals), the beds of the hotel are replaced by tourism-related regulations.

(iv) Producing, charging, renovating (soft), public-use tools used by the throne should be replaced and eliminated.

(v) A non-one-time chairs Budddding, at least three days of laundering.

(vi) Tour horticulture facilities, pyrethroids, recreational tools and public supplies for consumer use, purchase baskets, hand-washing vehicles, at least once every five days.

(vii) To be used by customers, clothing should be exchanged and laundering.

Article 8.

Article 9. The laundering of public supplies should use qualified, quantitative and environmentally sound poisoning, poisoning and laundering in accordance with the requirements of drug technology norms.

Article 10 is self-cleaning of public supplies, and public premises operators should establish a public laundering health management system for the laundering of poisoning and the designation of specialists responsible for the laundering of public supplies.

Article 11. The operators of public places should comply with the following provisions:

(i) Provide clean-up equipment, facilities that are adapted to the scale of operation and the types of public supplies;

(ii) The establishment of specialized laundering disincentives, the storage of pending poisoning items (zone), the interdiction of poisoning (zone), the collation of contaminated items (zone) and the dry space or mechanical drying, and the distribution of items to be dispersed, laundering, drying, renovated, breasting, classification, storage, distribution, etc. to prevent cross-polluting;

(iii) No sewage ponds, garbage, open toilets, poultry breeding sites and other open sources of pollution around 25 metres of poisoning sites, and to maintain environmental cleaning;

(iv) There is adequate access to drinking water and sewage treatment facilities;

(v) A health protection facility, such as ventilation, dust, trajectory, defence and pest;

(vi) A dedicated person with knowledge and skills related to laundering.

Without the conditions set forth in the preceding paragraph, laundering of drug services by public supplies should be commissioned.

Article 12. Where places such as hairdress, beauty, washing, etc. should be equipped with specialized insecticide-treated facilities using public-use tools such as hairdress.

Public places provide non-one-time tug shoes for consumer use and should be equipped with insecticide-treated facilities such as slack-of-camps.

Article 13 Staff who are directly involved in laundering of public supplies should be allowed to take care after the medical examination is qualified. The operators of public places should organize annual health inspections of staff who are directly involved in laundering of public supplies, medical examinations projects and requests to be implemented in the light of the contents of preventive health medical examinations.

Those who suffer from diseases such as diarrhoea, typhoid, hepatitis, e-virus hepatitis, activities on tuberculosis, escapability or intrusive skin diseases do not engage directly in the laundering of public goods.

Article 14. The laundering of public supplies should be monitored by public operators, public supplies laundering services, in accordance with the following provisions:

(i) A non-one-time public use tool, with at least one year of health testing.

(ii) Non-one textile supplies, at least one health test quarterly.

(iii) A centralized air conditioning system at least once a year.

Article 15. The health administration should conduct regular health sampling testing of public supplies of operators in public places, public supplies laundering services, and the timely publication of the findings to society.

Chapter III

Article 16 laundering of public goods shall be subject to the provisions of article 11, paragraphs (c), (iv), 5 and (vi), of this approach, and shall be in compliance with the following conditions:

(i) The area of laundering of poisoning should be adapted to the scale of production;

(ii) The establishment of separate public supplies for recycling, behing, diffusing, drying (modification) areas, packaging, maintenance, intermodal distribution, and stoves;

(iii) The establishment of a specialized inspection room with the capacity to test the total number of bacteriological, the large-scale stereotyped project, with specialized technical personnel with the test of qualifications and the facilities for testing equipment;

(iv) A dedicated transport tool.

Article 17 Public laundering of poisoning services should be available in the city of the institution's location or in the district health administration within 15 days of the date of the licence of business.

Changes occurred in the case-by-case matter, and public supplies laundering services should be registered within five working days from the date of the change.

Public supplies laundering services should establish systems such as the management of poisoning, the safe operation (including occupational health safety), the training of practitioners and the registration of insecticide-treated supplies, ensuring that laundering of public supplies is in line with health norms.

Article 19 Public laundering of poisoning services should be screened for the total number of bacterial products per sterilized and the self-registered test results should be registered.

The public supplies that have been poisoned should be closed, marking the precipitation of qualified identifiers, indicating the name, address, sterilization method, sterilization date, maintenance period.

Article 20: Public supplies cleaning services should take effective measures to prevent poisoned public supplies from being contaminated by toxic substances in storage, transport, transit and distribution processes.

Chapter IV

Article 21 Operators of public premises that have installed a centralized air condition system should establish a centralized system of health management for air conditioning systems, develop management measures and emergency scenarios for the prevention of the transmission of diseases in the centralized air condition system, and conduct regular inspections and maintenance.

Article 2 focuses on air conditioning systems that should maintain clean, untreated microbiological contamination and be regularly cleaned in accordance with health requirements.

A centralized air conditioning system for construction, alteration and expansion should conduct a health evaluation of airborne diseases and evaluate the operation of qualified parties.

Article 23. Professional institutions that conduct centralized air conditioning operations should be equipped with specialized equipment and corresponding professional technicians.

The operators of public places should entrust professional laundering agencies with the laundering of the system of centralized air conditioning systems in public places.

Article 24 presents one of the following conditions for the evaluation of health, and the operators of public places should immediately shut down and clean up the drug concentration air conditioning system, which can be relaunched by the health-based evaluation body to detect and evaluate qualified parties:

(i) To test blocs in cold water and refrigeration;

(ii) The detection of micro-organisms such as lung ventilation, thwar-economies, etc. influenza;

(iii) To detect micro-organisms in wind dust;

(iv) The total number of bacteria or sterilies per square cm greater than 100 bacteria;

(v) The size of the surface area in the wind management area is greater than 20 metres;

(vi) The assessment of healthlogy indicates the need for laundering and other circumstances.

Chapter V Legal responsibility

Article 25 Operators of Public Facilities and the Public Laundering Service are one of the following cases, and the Health Administration is responsible for changing its duration and may grant administrative penalties:

(i) In violation of article 6 of this approach, public supplies that are provided are detected incompatible with the corresponding health standards and health norms, may be fined by more than 1 million dollars in 2000; in the event of serious consequences, with a fine of up to 20,000 dollars;

(ii) In violation of article 9 of this approach, the use of non-conventional, sterilized or public supplies that are not laundering in accordance with toxic technical norms may be fined by more than 5,000 dollars;

(iii) In violation of article 13 of this approach, the use of persons who are not subject to medical examination or are not eligible for medical examinations to work directly in the laundering of public supplies, may be fined by more than 5,000 dollars;

(iv) In violation of article 14 of the present approach, public supplies that are subject to a regular test body that is qualified to carry out a regular test of poisoning may be fined by more than 500 dollars.

Article 26 contains one of the following cases in the laundering of public supplies, which is being responsibly corrected by the health administration and can be punished administratively:

(i) Without the conditions set out in article 16 of this scheme, the provision of public supplies to concentrate on the laundering of drug services could be fined by more than 5,000 dollars;

(ii) In violation of article 17 of this approach, a fine of $3000 could not be imposed on the health administration or for the processing of changes;

(iii) In violation of article 19 of this approach, the self-execution and registration of public supplies that have been laundering, or the failure to provide for the packaging and marking of public supplies that have been poisoned, may be fined by more than 5,000 dollars.

Article 27 Operators of public places violates this approach by providing that one of the following cases is the responsibility of the health administration to change its duration and may be fined by more than 500 dollars.

(i) In violation of article VII of this approach, article 8 stipulates that no replacement or laundering of public supplies is required;

(ii) Incompatible with the conditions set out in article 11 of this approach, the laundering of a non-one-time textile public supplies does not require the authorization of public supplies for the laundering of toxic services;

(iii) In violation of article 12 of this approach, no drug-destruction facilities are provided.

Article 28, in violation of article 22, paragraph 2, and article 24 of this approach, provides that a centralized air conditioning system in public places is used without health testing or evaluation of inadmissibility, or that there is no provision for the closure and laundering of a centralized air condition system, which is modified by a time limit of responsibility of the health administration, which provides for the publication of the results of the testing to society and may be warned, or fined by more than 1,000 million dollars, for the denial of health supervision, with a fine of over three million dollars.

Annex VI

Article 29 of this approach states a centralized air conditioning system, which refers to the requirement for the provision of parameters such as the room or closed space air temperatures, humidity, cleanness and temperature speed, and the centralization of air handling, transmission, distribution of all equipment, pipelines, and annexes, instrument sheets.

Article 31 of this approach is implemented effective 1 June 2011, and the Government Order No. 25 of 2 December 2004 of the Southen City of South Africa on Public Removal of Pharmaceives of Sanitation was enacted.