Hromada

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In Ukraine, a hromada (Template:Langx) is the main type of municipality and the third level local self-government in Ukraine. The current hromadas were established by the Government of Ukraine on 12 June 2020.[1]

A municipality is designated urban hromada if its administration is located in a city; settlement hromada if it is located in a settlement (selyshche), and rural hromada if it is located in a village (selo) or a selyshche.[2] Hromadas are grouped to form raions (districts); groups of raions form oblasts (regions). Optionally, a municipality may be divided into starosta okruhs (similar to civil parishes in Great Britain or frazioni in Italy), which are the lowest level of local government in Ukraine.

Similar terms exist in Poland (gromada) and in Belarus (hramada). The literal translation of this term is "community", similar to the terms used in western European states, such as Germany (Gemeinde), France (commune), Italy (comune), and Portugal (freguesia), or in several English-speaking countries (township).

List of hromadas

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In total, there are 1469 hromadas (as of 1 October 2023), including:

Region Number of hromadas
Hromada type Total
urban settlement rural
Template:Country data Zakarpattia Oblast 11 18 35 64
Template:Country data Cherkasy Oblast 16 10 40 66
File:Flag of Chernivtsi Oblast.svg Chernivtsi Oblast 11 7 34 52
File:Flag of Chernihiv Oblast.svg Chernihiv Oblast 16 24 17 57
Template:Country data Donetsk Oblast 43 14 9 66
File:Flag of Dnipropetrovsk Oblast.svg Dnipropetrovsk Oblast 20 25 41 86
Template:Country data Kharkiv Oblast 17 26 13 56
Template:Country data Kherson Oblast 9 17 23 49
File:Flag of Khmelnytskyi Oblast.svg Khmelnytskyi Oblast 13 22 25 60
Template:Country data Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast 15 23 24 62
Template:Country data Kyiv Oblast 24 23 22 69
Template:Country data Kirovohrad Oblast 12 16 21 49
Template:Country data Luhansk Oblast 20 12 5 37
Template:Country data Lviv Oblast 39 16 18 73
Template:Country data Mykolaiv Oblast 9 14 29 52
File:Flag of Odesa Oblast.svg Odesa Oblast 19 25 47 91
Template:Country data Poltava Oblast 16 20 24 60
File:Flag of Rivne Oblast.svg Rivne Oblast 11 13 40 64
Template:Country data Sumy Oblast 15 15 21 51
Template:Country data Ternopil Oblast 18 16 21 55
Template:Country data Vinnytsia Oblast 18 22 23 63
Template:Country data Volyn Oblast 11 18 25 54
Template:Country data Zaporizhzhia Oblast 14 17 36 67
Template:Country data Zhytomyr Oblast 12 22 32 66
File:Flag of Ukraine.svg Ukraine 409 435 625 1469

History

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Hromadas of Ukraine as of 2020 (raions in Crimea)

Prior to 2020, the basic units of administrative division in Ukraine were rural councils, settlement councils and city councils, which were often referred to by the generic term hromada.

The Constitution of Ukraine and some other laws, including the "Law on local self-governance", delegate certain rights and obligations for hromadas. Types of hromadas include cities, rural settlements, and villages. In his draft constitutional amendments of June 2014, President Petro Poroshenko proposed changing the administrative divisions of Ukraine, which he felt should include oblasts, raions and hromadas.[3]

On 12 June 2020 the Government of Ukraine approved the territories and administrative centers of the hromadas, which cover settlements in all regions of Ukraine except for Crimea.[4] A total of 1470 hromadas were approved.

On 12 August 2020 the Sokoliv hromada of the Cherkasy Oblast became a part of the Zhashkiv hromada.[5] Thus, there were 1469 hromadas.

Administrative tasks and objectives

Script error: No such module "Unsubst". Each hromada carries out two types of task: own and commissioned. Own tasks are public tasks exercised by self-government, which serve to satisfy the needs of the community. The tasks can be twofold:

  • compulsory – where the municipality cannot decline to carry out the tasks, and must set up a budget to carry them out in order to provide the inhabitants with the basic public benefits.
  • optional – where the municipality can carry them out in accordance with available budgetary means, set out only to specific local needs (on the hromada's own responsibility and budget).

Own objectives

Own high objectives include matters such as spatial harmony, real estate management, environmental protection and nature conservation, water management, country roads, public streets, bridges, squares and traffic systems, water supply systems and source, the sewage system, removal of urban waste, water treatment, maintenance of cleanliness and order, sanitary facilities, dumps and council waste, supply of electric and thermal energy and gas, public transport, health care, welfare, care homes, subsidised housing, public education, cultural facilities including public libraries and other cultural institutions, historic monuments conservation and protection, the sports facilities and tourism including recreational grounds and devices, marketplaces and covered markets, green spaces and public parks, communal graveyards, public order and safety, fire and flood protection with equipment maintenance and storage, maintaining objects and devices of the public utility and administrative buildings, pro-family policy including social support for pregnant women, medical and legal care, supporting and popularising the self-government initiatives and cooperation within the commune including with non-governmental organizations, interaction with regional communities from other countries, etc.

Commissioned tasks

Commissioned tasks cover the remaining public tasks resulting from legitimate needs of the state, commissioned by central government for the units of local government to implement. The tasks are handed over on the basis of statutory by-laws, charters and regulations, or by way of agreements between the self-government units and central-government administration.

See also

References

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  3. Poroshenko suggests granting status of regions to Crimea, Kyiv, Sevastopol, creating new political subdivision of 'community' Template:Webarchive, Interfax-Ukraine (26 June 2014)
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External links

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