United territorial communities of Ukraine
An amalgamated territorial community (Ukrainian: Об'єднана територіальна громада, Obyednana terytorialʹna hromada), in short, is a basic unit of administrative division in Ukraine. It is an enlarged community consisting of other territorial communities, formerly known as councils (miskrada, silrada, selyshchna rada), residents of which decided to unite. According to the Law of Ukraine adopted in 1997, a community, also known as "hromada", is composed of its residents who are united by living in village, settlement, city on permanent basis or voluntary association of residents of several villages that has one administrative center. The communities form raions, several raions form oblast. City communities of cities Kiev and Sevastopol[nb 1] have a special status and are not part of any raion or oblast.
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According to December 2019 draft constitutional changes submitted to parliament by President Volodymyr Zelensky United territorial communities are planned to replace the Raions of Ukraine.[2] On 6 March 2020 Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal stated that (at the time) 1,045 united territorial communities had been established and that 350 more had to be created.[3] The united territorial communities have already taken over most tasks of the raions (education, healthcare, sport facilities, culture, and social welfare).[4]
History
Active formation of these communities started in 2015 and is part of couple of reforms such as the decentralization reform and the administrative division reform. It is planned that they will replace all councils (local level territorial units).
Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko's June 2014 draft constitutional amendments proposed changing the administrative divisions of Ukraine, which should include regions, districts and "hromadas".[5]
On 5 February 2015 the Ukrainian parliament adopted the law "On voluntary association of territorial communities" that creates united territorial communities meaning settlement councils, rural councils and a city of district significance can create a new administrative unit.[6] Any amalgamated hromada with a city as an administrative centre is an urban hromada, any amalgamated hromada with an urban-type settlement as an administrative centre is a settlement hromada, and any amalgamated hromada with a village as an administrative centre is a rural hromada.[7] New local elections in these united territorial communities were then held.[8] 226 will be holding elections in 2018 and 2019.[9] The first 252 were held in 2017.[10]
The Law "On Local Self-Government in Ukraine" stipulates that local budgets should have enough money to be administered by local self-government bodies.[11] Because many of the small rural councils and cities of district significance could never hope to do this the new administrative unit united territorial community was created.[11] United territorial communities collect and spend more local taxes then the Raions of Ukraine were ever allowed to.[4]
United territorial communities are planned to replace the Raions according to December 2019 draft constitutional changes submitted to parliament by President Volodymyr Zelensky.[2]
On 6 March 2020 Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal stated that 1,045 united territorial communities had already been established in Ukraine, noting that 350 more had to be created.[3]
List of communities
Kharkiv Oblast
- Chkalovs'ke United territorial community
Ternopil Oblast
- Ternopil United territorial community
Vinnytsia Oblast
Name | Center | Raion's local councils | CRS |
---|---|---|---|
Vinnytsia Raion | |||
Vinnytsia city | Vinnytsia | Vinnytsia Raion 1 settlement | Vinnytsia |
Illintsi city | Illintsi | Illintsi Raion 1 city Illintsi Raion 11 villages |
|
Lypovets city | Lypovets | Lypovets Raion 1 city Lypovets Raion 16 villages Orativ Raion 1 village |
|
Nemyriv city | Nemyriv | Nemyriv Raion 1 city Nemyriv Raion 19 villages |
|
Voronovytsia settlement | Voronovytsia | Vinnytsia Raion 1 settlement Vinnytsia Raion 1 village |
|
Stryzhavka settlement | Stryzhavka | Vinnytsia Raion 1 settlement Vinnytsia Raion 4 villages Lityn Raion 1 village |
|
Turbiv settlement | Turbiv | Lypovets Raion 1 settlement Lypovets Raion 9 villages Kalynivka Raion 1 village |
|
Yakushentsi village | Yakushentsi | Vinnytsia Raion 6 villages Lityn Raion 2 villages |
|
Ahronomichne village | Ahronomichne | Vinnytsia Raion 4 villages | |
Luka-Meleshkivska village | Luka-Meleshkivska | Vinnytsia Raion 4 villages Tyvriv Raion 2 villages |
|
Lityn village | Lityn | Lityn Raion 1 settlement Lityn Raion 13 villages |
|
Zhmerynka Raion | |||
Zhmerynka city | Zhmerynka | Zhmerynka Raion 1 settlement Zhmerynka Raion 11 villages |
Zhmerynka |
Bar city | Bar | Bar Raion 1 city Bar Raion 20 villages |
|
Kopaihorod settlement | Kopaihorod | Bar Raion 1 settlement Bar Raion 6 villages |
|
Severynivka village | Severynivka | Zhmerynka Raion 6 villages Bar Raion 1 village |
|
Stanislavchyk village | Stanislavchyk | Zhmerynka Raion 8 villages | |
Mohyliv-Podilskyi Raion | |||
Mohyliv-Podilskyi city | Mohyliv-Podilskyi | Mohyliv-Podilskyi Raion 10 villages | Mohyliv-Podilskyi |
Khmilnyk Raion | |||
Khmilnyk city | Khmilnyk | Khmilnyk Raion 15 villages | Khmilnyk |
Koziatyn city | Koziatyn | Koziatyn Raion 7 villages | Koziatyn |
Kalynivka settlement | Kalynivka | Kalynivka Raion 1 city Kalynivka Raion 22 villages |
|
Hlukhivtsi settlement | Hlukhivtsi | Koziatyn Raion 2 settlements Koziatyn Raion 7 villages |
|
Makhnivka village | Makhnivka | Koziatyn Raion 8 villages | |
Samhorodok village | Samhorodok | Koziatyn Raion 10 villages | |
Ivaniv village | Ivaniv | Kalynivka Raion 6 villages | |
Haisyn Raion | |||
Haisyn city | Haisyn | Haisyn Raion 1 city Haisyn Raion 16 villages |
|
Ladyzhyn city | Ladyzhyn | Tulchyn Raion 1 village | Ladyzhyn |
Bershad city | Bershad | Bershad Raion 1 city Bershad Raion 18 villages |
|
Dashiv settlement | Dashiv | Illintsi Raion 1 settlement Illintsi Raion 11 villages |
|
Dzhulynka village | Dzhulynka | Bershad Raion 2 villages | |
Krasnopilka village | Krasnopilka | Haisyn Raion 6 villages Teplyk Raion 2 villages |
|
Kunka village | Kunka | Haisyn Raion 4 villages |
Notes
- Sevastopol is a city in Crimea. Crimea is currently under dispute by Russia and Ukraine.[1]
References
- Gutterman, Steve (18 March 2014). "Putin signs Crimea treaty, will not seize other Ukraine regions". Reuters. Retrieved 17 July 2020.
- "Zelensky's decentralization: without features of Donbass, but with districts and prefects". BBC Ukrainian (in Ukrainian). 16 December 2019.
- Development strategies already approved in 19 regions of Ukraine, Ukrinform (7 April 2020)
- Where did 354 districts disappear to? Anatomy of loud reform, Glavcom (7 August 2020) (in Ukrainian)
- Poroshenko suggests granting status of regions to Crimea, Kyiv, Sevastopol, creating new political subdivision of 'community' Archived 2014-07-01 at the Wayback Machine, Interfax-Ukraine (26 June 2014)
- "Decentralization". The Reforms Guide. 2017-02-10. Retrieved 2018-12-28.
- "Glossary". Decentralization Reform. Retrieved 2020-01-18.
- Batkivschyna party says it gets most votes at local elections, Interfax Ukraine (25 December 2017)
Police investigate voter bribing cases as local elections held in 51 territorial communities, UNIAN (25 December 2017) - Elections Are Around the Corner, and Ukraine’s Political Parties Are Not Ready, Atlantic Council (6 December 2017)
- INTERIM REPORT ON OBSERVATION RESULTS OF THE FIRST LOCAL ELECTIONS IN UNITED TERRITORIAL COMMUNITIES ON 29 October 2017 (19.10.2017 26.10.2017) Archived 28 December 2018 at the Wayback Machine, OPORA (31 October 2017)
Ukraine holds elections in 51 UTCs today Archived 2017-12-26 at the Wayback Machine, OPORA (24 December 2017) - (in Ukrainian) Elections in the united territorial communities. What is this and what you need, Espreso TV (31 October 2017)
External links
- Law of Ukraine No. 807-IX. Про утворення та ліквідацію районів . Verkhovna Rada.
- Decentralization in Ukraine. Informational portal about the decentralization reform
- Details. Ukrainian decentralization portal.