NĚMECKÉ STÁTNÍ MINISTERSTVO PRO ČECHY A MORAVU, PRAHA (1906) 1939 - 1945 (1965), inv. 36, sig. 110-2/12 Page 58 · 58 of 228
THE GERMAN STATE MINISTRY FOR CHECH AND MORAV, PRAGUE (1906) 1939 - 1945 (1965), inv. 36, sig. 110-2/12
English Translation
h Explanations on the establishment plan Chapter 2 To paragraph 1 : Those administrative matters which have so far been dealt with in the General Department of Central Administration, but are not bound by a resolution of the Supreme Deutsone Authority, have been excluded from the German State Ministries and transferred to a "Central Administration Office at the German Government Office" created for this purpose. These are parts of the Lisherigen Hauptbüro, the processing of the entire employment affairs and the sane remuneration of the staff belonging to the division of the German State Ministry, the whole Oberkasse and the danit contiguous cash supervision, as well as the preparatory nailing. The Central Administrative Office also has the right to appoint officials who have been seconded to other authorities or party departments for a longer period of time, without having to provide them with posts. &s are four posts for the office of the Reichsprotektor ( 1 Oberregierungsrat, 2 Ministerileamtshilfe) as well as two posts for officials at the party chancellery in Munich & 1 Ober Regierungsberat, 1 Regierungesrat) Bu Section 2: au In addition to the examination activities of the Oberstevnechungsberichtsbericht authority on the basis of an agreement reached with the Court of Auditors of the German Reich regarding the expenditure of the "eichsverwaltung", the work of these *egörde also has to serve the control of the effectiveness of the imperial supervision in the various Fer autonomous administrative branches. This requires a large number of higher qualified German inspectors. On point 3: The posts concern the Ministry of the Interior, the State Survey Office of Bohemia and Moravia, the Military Catastral Survey Office, the Prague and Brno regional authorities, the district authorities and police authorities as well as the German 'sundheitsamt'. In contrast to the Pandrats in the rest of the Reich, there are no senior German officials at the disposal of the German district heads as representatives.