|
|
This article does not cite any references or sources. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (December 2007) |
Austria is divided into 84 political districts (Politische Bezirke), and 15 Statutarstädte which form their own districts.
Function
The Austrian Bezirk is roughly equivalent to the Landkreis in Germany and County in the United States. The administrative office of a district, the Bezirkshauptmannschaft is headed by the Bezirkshauptmann. The districts are in charge of the administration of all matters of federal and state administrative law and subject to orders from the higher instances, usually the Landeshauptmann (governor) in matters of federal law and the Landesregierung (state government) in state law. Thus, the district is the basic unit of general administration in Austria.
Officials on the district level are not elected, but appointed by the state government. There are also independent cities in Austria. They are called Statutarstadt in Austrian administrative law. These cities are not part of any district and the city administration covers all matters usually a district administration would do.
Usually, an independent city is home to a district administration which is responsible for the surrounding area of the respective city. For example, Innsbruck is an independent city surrounded by the district "Innsbruck-Land" of which the district administration is situated in the city of Innsbruck.
Vienna, which is both a state and a Statutarstadt, is further subdivided into districts, which are divisions used for local administration by the city government.
For more information on Austrian administration, see States of Austria.
List of political districts
List of independent cities
| City | Vehicle registration code | State |
|---|---|---|
| Eisenstadt | E[2] | Burgenland |
| Graz | G | Styria |
| Innsbruck | I | Tirol |
| Klagenfurt | K | Carinthia |
| Krems an der Donau | KS | Lower Austria |
| Leoben | LE | Styria |
| Linz | L | Upper Austria |
| Rust | E[2] | Burgenland |
| Salzburg | S | Salzburg |
| Sankt Pölten | P | Lower Austria |
| Schwechat | SW | Lower Austria |
| Steyr | SR | Upper Austria |
| Villach | VI | Carinthia |
| Waidhofen an der Ybbs | WY | Lower Austria |
| Wels | WE | Upper Austria |
| Wien (Vienna) | W | Wien (Vienna) |
| Wiener Neustadt | WN | Lower Austria |
- ^ Vehicle registration plates issued in the district of Liezen usually show the LI-code. However, in the areas around Bad Aussee and Gröbming which are nevertheless part of Liezen district registration plates showing the BA- or GB-code respectively are issued.
- ^ a b The cities of Eisentadt and Rust share the E-code on their vehicle registration plates.
|
||||||||
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)





