STÁTNÍ TAJEMNÍK U ŘÍŠSKÉHO PROTEKTORA V ČECHÁCH A NA MORAVĚ, PRAHA, inv. 1592, sig. 109-4/1346 (poškozeno) Page 132 · 132 of 250
STATE SECRETARY FOR THE RUSSIAN PROTECTOR IN THINGS AND IN MORAVA, PRAGUE, inv. 1592, sig. 109-4/1346 (damaged)
English Translation
bl - 35 = To assign houses to their purpose, Jewish and Czech tenants often had to be terminated, the apartments were prepared and countless requests for housing were made. Because of the need for housing in Prague, numerous vacant apartments were also made available to members of other service stations. Further tasks of the administration resulted from the fact that the houses had to be properly protected against fire damage, liability and other sohides. Sehides on the houses, flats and their facilities such as elevators, ice-skrinks etc. had to have been removed and decided on how far individual damages were to be borne by the tenants themselves. An attempt made in mid-1939 to transfer the management of the seized land to a non-profit settlement company failed. In contrast to the instructions given by the State Police Department in Prague, the settlement authority's accounts were late, the gravel revenues were not paid into the special account for this purpose, etc. - In addition, it was found that the settlement cooperative found itself in difficult financial conditions. In order to ensure proper management of the seized land, the establishment of its own land management had become inevitable as a result; it led the administration to the outside independent, but was directly under the control of the State Police Department. The task of the Land Administration was to manage the houses occupied by officers of the security police as well as the administration of the other foundations which were not left to the authorities. In the summer of 1994 the number of land seized for the benefit of the German Reich increased to about 1 8o, of which about 1 3o were in its own administration.