张掖市人民政府关于印发张掖市住房公积金行政执法暂行办法的通知

作者:法律资料网 时间:2024-07-22 13:17:09   浏览:8266   来源:法律资料网
下载地址: 点击此处下载

张掖市人民政府关于印发张掖市住房公积金行政执法暂行办法的通知

甘肃省张掖市人民政府


张掖市人民政府关于印发张掖市住房公积金行政执法暂行办法的通知



各县(区)人民政府,市政府各部门,市直及省属驻张各单位:

《张掖市住房公积金行政执法暂行办法》已经市政府第五十八次常务会议研究同意,现印发你们。请结合实际,认真遵照执行。









二〇一一年八月十日









张掖市住房公积金行政执法暂行办法



第一条 为进一步加强住房公积金行政执法工作,切实保障职工合法权益,根据《中华人民共和国行政处罚法》、《住房公积金管理条例》等法律法规规章,结合我市实际,制订本办法。

第二条 本办法所称住房公积金行政执法是指住房公积金管理部门依照相关法律法规规章及本办法对住房公积金违法行为依法进行检查、责令限期整改、实施行政处罚、申请人民法院强制执行等行为。

第三条 本办法适用于本市行政区域内的住房公积金行政执法活动。

第四条 住房公积金行政执法应当遵循实事求是、合法公正、教育为主、处罚为辅、查处与管理相结合的原则。

第五条 张掖市住房公积金管理中心(以下简称“公积金中心”)是本市住房公积金行政执法的主体,负责本市行政区域内住房公积金行政执法工作的组织实施。

第六条 公积金中心应当配备行政执法人员。行政执法人员必须具备良好的政治、业务素质和职业道德以及相应的法律知识。

第七条 住房公积金行政执法实行持证上岗。行政执法人员执法时须主动向当事人出示行政执法证件,且不得少于两人。行政执法人员与当事人有直接利害关系的,应当回避。

第八条 住房公积金行政执法的对象是本市行政区域内存在住房公积金违法行为的单位和个人。公积金中心应依法查处下列住房公积金违法行为:

(一)不办理住房公积金缴存登记的;

(二)不为本单位职工办理住房公积金账户设立手续的;

(三)逾期不缴或少缴住房公积金的;

(四)违反法律法规规定的其他行为。

第九条 任何单位和个人对违反住房公积金管理法律法规的行为都具有揭发、检举、控告和如实作证的权利、义务。

第十条 公积金中心通过检查或群众信访、举报等途径获知单位或个人存在住房公积金违法行为的,应在5个工作日内指定执法人员进行初步调查,收集相关证据,做好调查笔录。被调查单位或个人须积极配合调查,并如实提供与违法行为有关的事实、情节和违法行为后果的证据材料。

第十一条 调查证实当事人存在住房公积金违法行为的,公积金中心应当予以立案,并责令当事人限期纠正。事实不清或违法事实不能成立的,公积金中心应当停止调查。

第十二条 限期内拒不纠正的,公积金中心应当根据《住房公积金管理条例》有关规定给予当事人相应的行政处罚。

(一)拒不办理住房公积金缴存登记或者不为本单位职工办理住房公积金账户设立手续的,公积金中心可对当事人作出1万元以上、5万元以下罚款的处罚决定;

(二)逾期不缴或者少缴住房公积金的,公积金中心可申请人民法院强制执行。

第十三条 行政处罚决定作出后,公积金中心应当向当事人送达《行政处罚违法行为告知书》。对当事人处以3万元以上罚款的,公积金中心应当向当事人一并送达《行政处罚听证告知书》,告知当事人有要求举行听证的权利。

第十四条 当事人收到《行政处罚违法行为告知书》后要求陈述、申辩的,公积金中心应当充分听取当事人的意见,并做好记录;对当事人提出的事实、理由和证据,公积金中心应当进行复核。符合听证条件且当事人要求听证的,应在收到《行政处罚听证告知书》之日起3日内向公积金中心提出书面听证申请;超过期限未提出听证要求的,视为放弃听证权利;公积金中心受理当事人听证要求的,应当按照《中华人民共和国行政处罚法》和《甘肃省行政处罚听证程序暂行规定》的有关要求组织听证。

第十五条 当事人不要求陈述、申辩、听证的,或者当事人陈述、申辩、听证后不改变行政处罚意见的,公积金中心应当向当事人送达《行政处罚决定书》。

第十六条 当事人收到《行政处罚决定书》后,应在法定期限内主动履行行政处罚决定。处以罚款的,当事人应当自收到《行政处罚决定书》之日起15日内缴纳罚款。到期不缴纳的,根据《中华人民共和国行政处罚法》第五十一条之规定加处罚款;当事人确有困难,需要延期或分期缴纳罚款的,应向公积金中心提出书面申请,并提供延期或分期缴纳罚款的计划保证书,经公积金中心批准后,可以暂缓或者分期缴纳。

第十七条 当事人对行政处罚决定不服的,可在《行政处罚决定书》送达之日起60日内向市人民政府申请复议,也可在《行政处罚决定书》送达之日起三个月内向人民法院提起行政诉讼。复议或诉讼期间,行政处罚决定不停止执行,法律另有规定的除外。

第十八条 当事人在法定期限内既不申请复议,又不向人民法院提起行政诉讼,也拒不执行行政处罚决定的,公积金中心可在法定起诉期届满之日起180日内申请人民法院强制执行。

第十九条 事实不清或违法事实不能成立的,或者处罚决定执行完毕的应予以结案。结案后,公积金中心应及时将全部案卷材料整理成册,立卷归档。

第二十条 公积金中心及执法人员应在法定职权范围内,依法定程序从事执法活动;超越职权范围或违反执法程序所作出的行政处罚无效。侵犯当事人合法权益的,当事人有权向有关部门投诉。

第二十一条 行政执法人员玩忽职守、滥用职权或徇私舞弊的,由公积金中心根据情节轻重予以批评教育或行政处分;构成犯罪的,移送司法机关依法追究刑事责任。

第二十二条 无理阻挠、拒绝执法人员依法行使职权或打击报复执法人员的,由公安机关依照《中华人民共和国治安管理处罚法》进行处罚;构成犯罪的,依法追究刑事责任。

第二十三条 行政执法文书均可采取当场交付、留置、邮寄或公告等方式送达。

第二十四条 公积金中心可依据有关法律法规规章和本办法制定实施细则或操作规程,报市住房公积金管理委员会审查备案后执行。

第二十五条 本办法自发布之日起执行。










下载地址: 点击此处下载
Chapter IV
Function of Panels: Art. 11 of the DSU


OUTLINE


I Introduction
II Application of Art. 11 as a General Standard of Review
III Review in “neither de novo nor total defence”
IV Allegation against Panels’ Standard of Review
V Exercise of Judicial Economy





I Introduction
The function of panels is expressly defined in Art. 11 of the DSU, which reads as follows:

“The function of panels is to assist the DSB in discharging its responsibilities under this Understanding and the covered agreements. Accordingly, a panel should make an objective assessment of the matter before it, including an objective assessment of the facts of the case and the applicability of and conformity with the relevant covered agreements, and make such other findings as will assist the DSB in making the recommendations or in giving the rulings provided for in the covered agreements. Panels should consult regularly with the parties to the dispute and give them adequate opportunity to develop a mutually satisfactory solution.”

This provision suggests that the function of panels is to make an objective assessment such as to assist the DSB in making the recommendations or in giving the rulings provided for in the covered agreements. However, how do panels fulfill their functions as provided in Art. 11 of the DSU? It is the issue that we will touch on in this chapter. In this chapter, the author explores on the standard of review issue under the WTO, i.e. “an objective assessment”; as well as on the exercised judicial economy principle developed in panel’s review.
With regard to the standard of review issue, the GATT/WTO dispute settlement procedures have increasingly confronted questions concerning the degree to which an international body, under the GATT/WTO, should “second guess” a decision of a national government agency concerning economic regulations that are allegedly inconsistent with an international rule. It seems clear that the international agreement doesn’t permit a national government’s determination always to prevail, otherwise the international rules could be easily evaded or rendered ineffective. But should the international body approach the issues involved without any deference to the national government? It has been argued in the GATT/WTO proceedings that panels should respect national government determinations, up to some point. That “point” is the crucial issue that has sometimes been labelled the “standard of review”.1
Of course, this issue is not unique to the GATT/WTO. Naturally, the standard-of-review issue is one that many legal systems face. “The standard-of-review question is faced at least implicitly whenever sovereign members of a treaty yield interpretive and dispute settlement powers to international panels and tribunals. Moreover, as national economies become increasingly interdependent, and as the need for international cooperation and coordination accordingly becomes greater, the standard-of-review question will become increasingly important.” 2 And “it can be seen that the standard-of-review question is a recurring and delicate one, and one that to some extent goes to the core of an international procedure that must (in a rule-based system) assess a national government’s actions against treaty or other international norms”. 3
However, for the immediate purpose, we want to focus below on the more particular question of the proper standard of review for a WTO panel when it undertakes to examine a national government’s actions or rulings that engage the question of consistency with the various WTO agreements and are subject to the DSU procedures.

II Application of Art. 11 as a General Standard of Review
Under the WTO jurisprudence, it’s demonstrated that Art. 11 of the DSU has been applied as a general standard of review. Art. 11 suggests that the function of panels is to make “an objective assessment” so as to assist the DSB in making the recommendations or in giving the rulings provided for in the covered agreements.
For example, in US-Shirts and Blouses (DS33), the Panel rules that, “although the DSU does not contain any specific reference to standards of review, we consider that Article 11 of the DSU which describes the parameters of the function of panels, is relevant here”. 4
And the application of Art. 11 as a general standard of review under the DSU is analyzed systematically in EC-Hormones (DS26/DS48) where the Appellate Body rules that: 5
“The first point that must be made in this connection, is that the SPS Agreement itself is silent on the matter of an appropriate standard of review for panels deciding upon SPS measures of a Member. Nor are there provisions in the DSU or any of the covered agreements (other than the Anti-Dumping Agreement) prescribing a particular standard of review. Only Article 17.6(i) of the Anti-Dumping Agreement has language on the standard of review to be employed by panels engaged in the ‘assessment of the facts of the matter’. We find no indication in the SPS Agreement of an intent on the part of the Members to adopt or incorporate into that Agreement the standard set out in Article 17.6(i) of the Anti-Dumping Agreement. Textually, Article 17.6(i) is specific to the Anti-Dumping Agreement.
[…]
We do not mean, however, to suggest that there is at present no standard of review applicable to the determination and assessment of the facts in proceedings under the SPS Agreement or under other covered agreements. In our view, Article 11 of the DSU bears directly on this matter and, in effect, articulates with great succinctness but with sufficient clarity the appropriate standard of review for panels in respect of both the ascertainment of facts and the legal characterization of such facts under the relevant agreements […]”
In sum, for all but one of the covered agreements, Art. 11 of the DSU sets forth the appropriate standard of review for panels. As stated on more than one occasion, Art. 11 of the DSU, and, in particular, its requirement that “a panel should make an objective assessment of the matter before it, including an objective assessment of the facts of the case and the applicability of and conformity with the relevant covered agreements”, sets forth the appropriate standard of review for panels examining the consistency or inconsistency of alleged measures under the WTO jurisprudence. And the only exception is the Agreement on Implementation of Article VI of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade 1994, in which a specific provision, Art. 17.6, sets out a special standard of review for disputes arising under that Agreement(to be discussed in subsequent chapter).6

III Review in “neither de novo nor total defence”
In EC-Hormones (DS26/DS48), in the view of the European Communities, “the principal alternative approaches to the problem of formulating the ‘proper standard of review’ so far as panels are concerned are two-fold. The first is designated as ‘de novo review’. This standard of review would allow a panel complete freedom to come to a different view than the competent authority of the Member whose act or determination is being reviewed. A panel would have to ‘verify whether the determination by the national authority was…correct (both factually and procedurally)’. The second is described as ‘deference’. Under a ‘deference’ standard, a panel, in the submission of the European Communities, should not seek to redo the investigation conducted by the national authority but instead examine whether the ‘procedure’ required by the relevant WTO rules had been followed”.7 In this respect, the Appellate Body rules that:8
“So far as fact-finding by panels is concerned, their activities are always constrained by the mandate of Article 11 of the DSU: the applicable standard is neither de novo review as such, nor ‘total deference’, but rather the ‘objective assessment of the facts’. Many panels have in the past refused to undertake de novo review, wisely, since under current practice and systems, they are in any case poorly suited to engage in such a review. On the other hand, ‘total deference to the findings of the national authorities’, it has been well said, ‘could not ensure an 'objective assessment' as foreseen by Article 11 of the DSU’.”
The ruling is confirmed on many other occasions. For example, the Panel on US-Underwear (DS24) finds that: 9
“In our opinion, a policy of total deference to the findings of the national authorities could not ensure an ‘objective assessment’ as foreseen by Article 11 of the DSU. This conclusion is supported, in our view, by previous panel reports that have dealt with this issue, and most notably in the panel report on the ‘Transformers’ case.
The panel in the ‘Transformers’ case was confronted with the argument of New Zealand that the determination of ‘material injury’ by the competent New Zealand investigating authority could not be scrutinized by the panel. The ‘Transformers’ panel responded to this argument as follows:
‘The Panel agreed that the responsibility to make a determination of material injury caused by dumped imports rested in the first place with the authorities of the importing contracting party concerned. However, the Panel could not share the view that such a determination could not be scrutinized if it were challenged by another contracting party. On the contrary, the Panel believed that if a contracting party affected by the determination could make a case that the importation could not in itself have the effect of causing material injury to the industry in question, that contracting party was entitled, under the relevant GATT provisions and in particular Article XXIII, that its representations be given sympathetic consideration and that eventually, if no satisfactory adjustment was effected, it might refer the matter to the CONTRACTING PARTIES, as had been done by Finland in the present case. To conclude otherwise would give governments complete freedom and unrestricted discretion in deciding anti-dumping cases without any possibility to review the action taken in the GATT. This would lead to an unacceptable situation under the aspect of law and order in international trade relations as governed by the GATT’.”
In short, for the panel to adopt a policy of total deference to the findings of the national authorities could not ensure an “objective assessment” as foreseen by Art. 11 of the DSU. This conclusion is supported, in our view, by previous panel reports that have dealt with this issue. However, panels do not see their review as a substitute for the proceedings conducted by national investigating authorities, either. For example, in Argentina-Footwear (DS121), the Panel doesn’t consider that they have the mandate to conduct a de novo review: 10
“This approach is consistent with the reports of panels reviewing national investigations… The panel on United States - Anti-dumping Duties on Import of Salmon from Norway concluded that it should not engage in a de novo review of the evidence examined by the national investigating authority.
The panel on United States - Underwear followed this approach by noting, however, that it did not see its ‘review as a substitute for the proceedings conducted by national investigating authorities or by the Textiles Monitoring Body (TMB). Rather…the Panel's function should be to assess objectively the review conducted by the national investigating authority, in this case the CITA. We draw particular attention to the fact that a series of panel reports in the anti-dumping and subsidies/countervailing duties context have made it clear that it is not the role of panels to engage in a de novo review. In our view, the same is true for panels operating in the context of the ATC, since they would be called upon, as in the cases dealing with anti-dumping and/or subsidies/countervailing duties, to review the consistency of a determination by a national investigating authority imposing a restriction under the relevant provisions of the relevant WTO legal instruments, in this case the ATC. …’
Accordingly, the panel on United States - Underwear decided, ‘in accordance with Article 11 of the DSU, to make an objective assessment of the Statement issued by the US authorities … which, as the parties to the dispute agreed, constitutes the scope of the matter properly before the Panel without, however, engaging in a de novo review. … an objective assessment would entail an examination of whether the CITA had examined all relevant facts before it, whether adequate explanation had been provided of how the facts as a whole supported the determination made, and, consequently, whether the determination made was consistent with the international obligations of the United States’.
The panel on United States - Shirts and Blouses also stated that ‘[t]his is not to say that the Panel interprets the ATC as imposing on the importing Member any specific method either for collecting data or for considering and weighing all the relevant economic factors upon which the importing Member will decide whether there is need for a safeguard restraint. The relative importance of particular factors including those listed in Article 6.3 of the ATC is for each Member to assess in the light of the circumstances of each case’.
These past GATT and WTO panel reports make it clear that panels examining national investigations in the context of the application of anti-dumping and countervailing duties, as well as safeguards under the ATC, have refrained from engaging in a de novo review of the evidence examined by the national authority.”
However, as emphasized by the Appellate Body, although panels are not entitled to conduct a de novo review of the evidence, nor to substitute their own conclusions for those of the competent authorities, this does not mean that panels must simply accept the conclusions of the competent authorities. In this respect, the phrase “de novo review” should not be used loosely. If a panel concludes that the competent authorities, in a particular case, have not provided a reasoned or adequate explanation for their determination, that panel has not, thereby, engaged in a de novo review. Nor has that panel substituted its own conclusions for those of the competent authorities. Rather, the panel has, consistent with its obligations under the DSU, simply reached a conclusion that the determination made by the competent authorities is inconsistent with the specific requirements of the covered Agreement. 11

合肥市人民政府关于废止《合肥市制止牟取暴利实施办法》等规章的决定

安徽省合肥市人民政府


合肥市人民政府关于废止《合肥市制止牟取暴利实施办法》等规章的决定

政府令〔2010〕第155号



  《合肥市人民政府关于废止〈合肥市制止牟取暴利实施办法〉等规章的决定》已经2010年11月5日市人民政府第70次常务会议审议通过,现予发布,自公布之日起生效。


市长
二○一○年十一月二十四日


合肥市人民政府关于废止《合肥市制止牟取暴利实施办法》等规章的决定


  为维护社会主义法制统一,现决定废止下列两件规章:

  一、合肥市制止牟取暴利实施办法(市政府令第30号发布根据市政府令第129号修改)

  二、合肥市禁止生产销售和使用一次性发泡塑料餐具的规定(市政府令第95号发布)

  本决定自公布之日起生效。