Kaohsiung City Government

The Kaohsiung City Government[upper-roman 1] is the municipal government of Kaohsiung. It was formed after the merger of Kaohsiung County and Kaohsiung City in December 2010. Its chief administrator is the directly elected Mayor of Kaohsiung.

Kaohsiung City Government
高雄市政府[upper-roman 1]
Agency overview
Formed1924 (1924)
JurisdictionKaohsiung City
HeadquartersLingya District (mayor's office)
Ministers responsible
  • Yang Ming-Jou (proxy), Mayor
  • Empty now, Deputy Mayors
Websitewww.kcg.gov.tw
Kaohsiung City Hall - Sihwei Administration Center
Kaohsiung City Hall - Fongshan Administration Center

History

Second Kaohsiung City Hall (1939-1992)

In 1924, Takao Town (Japanese: 高雄街) was upgraded to city status, and the Takao City Office was established in modern-day Gushan by the Japanese government which reported directly to Takao Prefecture. The city hall was located at the modern-day Dai Tien Kung temple. The second city hall was built in 1938 at modern-day Zhongzheng 4th Road, Yancheng District and commissioned on 16 September 1939.

After the handover of Taiwan from Japan to the Republic of China in 1945, the city was renamed Kaohsiung City Government.

A fast-growing population and rapid industrial and commercial development caused the expansion of the city government as well. In 1992, the city government moved to the new city hall building at Xiwei 3rd Road in Lingya District. The former city hall building in Yancheng District was turned into the Kaohsiung Museum of History on 25 October 1998.[1]

Administration

Bureaus

Cultural Affairs Bureau
Fire Bureau
Labor Bureau
Police Department
Public Health Bureau
  • Civil Affairs Bureau
  • Finance Bureau
  • Education Bureau
  • Economic Development Bureau
  • Marine Bureau
  • Agriculture Bureau
  • Tourism Bureau
  • Urban Development Bureau
  • Public Works Bureau
  • Water Resources Bureau
  • Social Affairs Bureau
  • Labor Affairs Bureau
  • Kaohsiung City Police Department
  • Fire Bureau
  • Department of Health
  • Environmental Protection Bureau
  • Kaohsiung Mass Rapid Transit
  • Bureau of Cultural Affairs
  • Transportation Bureau
  • Legal Affairs Bureau
  • Military service Bureau
  • Land Administration Bureau
  • Information Bureau

Offices

  • Secretariat
  • Department of Budget, Accounting and Statistics
  • Personnel Department
  • Civil Service Ethics Office

Commissions

  • Research, Development and Evaluation Commission
  • Indigenous Affairs Commission
  • Hakka Affairs Committee[2]

Mayor

Han Kuo-yu, the incumbent Mayor of Kaohsiung

The mayor of Kaohsiung City is the chief executive officer of the city. He/she is elected for a four-year term and limited to serving no more than two terms. Under the mayor there are 3 deputy mayors, 1 secretary-general, 2 deputy secretary-generals and 30 principal officers.[2] The incumbent Mayor of Kaohsiung is Han Kuo-yu of Kuomintang.

gollark: What are you using to do the mining?
gollark: Or later viaducts. They're very fun. Basically people tubes.
gollark: My idea for the tunnels was that they would be maybe 5x3 and we could just pack in cables as needed, plus an electric railway.
gollark: Yes, but we can put a cell directly on its output ports (or use expensive cables to connect to one) and drain from multiple sides of that.
gollark: We don't actually need paired fluxducts, due to that quirk of their transfer rates. I think.

See also

Notes

Words in native languages

References

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