Public Construction Commission

The Public Construction Commission (PCC; Chinese: 公共工程委員會; pinyin: Gōnggòng Gōngchéng Wěiyuánhuì) is an independent government agency of the Executive Yuan of the Republic of China (Taiwan) which is responsible for planning, reviewing, coordination, and supervision of public construction projects such as roads, bridges, highways in Taiwan. The agency follows national goals such as sustainability, high-quality, efficient, reliable and competitive national infrastructure.

Public Construction Commission
公共工程委員會
Gōnggòng Gōngchéng Wěiyuánhuì
Logo
Agency overview
Formed20 July 1995
Superseding agency
  • Public Construction Supervisory Board
JurisdictionRepublic of China (Taiwan)
HeadquartersXinyi, Taipei
Ministers responsible
Parent agencyExecutive Yuan
Websitewww.pcc.gov.tw

History

The agency was established in 1995 to oversee public works in Taiwan.[1]

Administrative structure

The agency is organized into the following departments.

  • Department of Planning
  • Department of Technology
  • Department of Technology Management
  • Secretariat
  • Personnel Office
  • Accounting Office
  • Legal Affairs Committee
  • Petitions and Appeals Committee
  • Complaint Review Board for Government Procurement
  • Engineering Technique Corroboration Committee
  • Professional Engineers Disciplinary Retrial Committee
  • Central Procurement Supervision Unit
  • Congressional Liaison Unit
  • Private Participation Unit

Ministers

Wu Tze-cheng, the incumbent Minister of Public Construction Commission.
gollark: You would just have to watch public opinion constantly to work out whether people were going to bee you.
gollark: That actually sounds bad, though?
gollark: /should be
gollark: Investigating crimes can sometimes be quite complex. Are people meant to just all do this as a part-time thing? What if there are disagreements on whether something is legal or not? What if there are disagreements on what the law even is?
gollark: Why not?

See also

References

  1. "Cementing Reform". Taiwan Today. 1 May 1996. Retrieved 16 May 2017.
  2. "Kuomintang News Network". Kmt.org.tw. 2013-10-23. Retrieved 2014-05-07.
  3. http://focustaiwan.tw/news/aipl/201604120018.aspx
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