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Qingdao Meteorological Disaster Warning Signal Issued And Communication Management

Original Language Title: 青岛市气象灾害预警信号发布与传播管理办法

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Dissemination and diffusion of meteorological disaster warning signals in Blue Island

(Adopted at the 13th ordinary meeting of the Government of the Youth of 31 May 2010 for consideration by the Government of the Youth of 11 June 2010 at the 205th Publication of the People's Government Order of the Youth Island, effective 1 August 2010)

Article 1, in order to regulate the dissemination and dissemination of meteorological disaster warning signals (hereinafter referred to as early warning signals), avoid and mitigate the damage caused by meteoral disasters, guarantee the safety of the people's life and property and develop this approach in accordance with the relevant legal regulations such as the People's Republic of China Meteorological Act, the Meteorological Disaster Defence Regulations.

Article II refers to early warning signals that meteorology sites owned by meteorological authorities have been disseminated to the public.

Early warning signals are composed of names, maps, standards and defence guidance.

Article 3. The issuance and dissemination of early warning signals within the city's administration.

Article IV.

Depending on the level of hazards, urgency and development that may be caused by meteorological disasters, the level of early warning signals is usually divided into four levels: IV (General), III (referred), II (serious), I (specially serious), subsidiaries, yellow, orange and red, while marking in English.

Article 5 City and district-level meteorological authorities are responsible for the issuance, updating, removal and dissemination of early warning signals in the current administration.

Sectors responsible for the management of radio television, communications, and emergency management agencies should be able to work with organizations that disseminate early warning signals in accordance with their respective responsibilities.

Article 6. Governments at all levels should strengthen early warning signal dissemination and dissemination of infrastructure, access to early warning signals and expand the coverage of early warning signals.

Article 7. The municipal meteorological authorities shall develop guidelines for the defence of meteorology, in accordance with the relevant national provisions, to make implementation to the public.

Article 8. The meteorological stations owned by the municipal and district-level municipal meteorological authorities shall, in accordance with their responsibilities, communicate early warning signals to the public of society, and other organizations or individuals shall not be issued.

Meteorological stations should issue early warning signals to the public of society, including through radio, television, newspapers, short-confidence platforms, outdoor e-learning devices.

The dissemination of early warning signals to the public of society should be timely, accurate and unpaid.

Article 9. In monitoring and forecasting the occurrence of meteorological disasters that meet the standards of early warning, the meteorological stations should report immediately to the Government of the people at this level to inform the relevant sectors and inform the broadcast, television, newspapers, telecommunications and units with an outdoor e-learning device (hereinafter referred to as the media).

When multiple meteorological disasters are likely to occur, meteorological stations can simultaneously issue multiple early warning signals.

Article 10. After receiving an early warning signal from the meteorological stations, the Government's response management at all levels should report to the leadership on a timely basis, in accordance with the requirements of the Meteorological Disaster Emergency Preparedness Profile, to initiate a decision to respond to the corresponding level of response and to report on time to the Government of the people at the highest level.

After receiving early warning signals from meteorological stations, maritime, safe regulation, land-based resource management, rural and urban construction, agriculture, ocean and fisheries, water, transport, tourism, education and municipal utilities, the services and units of their respective agencies should be informed in a timely manner, and the meteorological disaster defence.

Article 11. The media should establish a fast, stable and effective means of receiving early warning signals and identify specialized agencies or focal points to receive early warning information from meteorological stations.

Article 12 The media should be disseminated to the public in a timely and accurate manner, after receiving information on early warning signals from meteorological stations. Radio, television and telecommunications should be webcasted within 15 minutes; radio, television and TV should be broadcasted immediately, in large winds, storms, ventilation, ice, bleach, and fire warning signals.

Broadcasts, television, e-demonstration devices sketches, red early warning signals should be rolled.

Management units at airports, ports, vehicle stations, highway, tourist sites, etc. should use electronic demonstration devices and other effective facilities to disseminate early warning signals.

Article XIV Enterprises, Villages (LNL) Commissions should be made available in a timely manner to weather disaster defence after they were informed of the early warning signals issued by meteorological stations.

Article 15. The media shall not have the following acts:

(i) To refuse to disseminate early warning signals;

(ii) Sustaining the dissemination of early warning signals;

(iii) To modify and delete the content of early warning signals;

(iv) Dissemination of early warning signals from the meteorological stations affiliated to false, outdated and non- meteorological authorities.

Article 16 meteorological stations are monitored and forecasted to determine that weathers that generate meteorable disasters have been or are changing in the future, and early warning signals should be updated in a timely manner.

Article 17: Meteorological authorities and advocacy at all levels, the education sector should strengthen the knowledge-based advocacy of the Meteorological Disaster Defense Section, organize a variety of forms of awareness-raising activities and enhance public knowledge and capacity for early warning signals and defence guidance.

No organization or individual shall intrus the radio frequency of the dissemination of early warning signals without prejudice to or unauthorized access to specialized communications facilities.

Article 19 Meteorological staff play a role, leading to a failure to issue early warning signals in a timely manner or to issue significant errors, to dispose of directly responsible persons and associated supervisors; and to hold criminal responsibility in accordance with the law.

Article 20, in violation of article 15 of this approach, is corrected by the Meteorological Authority, warnings may be made and liable to fines of up to 20,000 dollars; in exceptional circumstances, there may be a fine of up to 50,000 yen; in breach of the law management.

Article 21 organizes or individuals in violation of article 18 of this approach, the termination of the offence by the Meteorological Authority, the duration of restitution or other remedies, which may be fined up to 20,000 dollars, in the event of a serious nature and may be fined up to 2,000 yen; the loss, the liability under the law, and the criminal responsibility of the law.

Article 2