Communauté d'agglomération Amiens Métropole
Communauté d'agglomération Amiens Métropole | |
---|---|
Country | France |
Region | Picardie |
Department | Somme |
No. of communes | 33 |
Established | 2000 |
Seat | Amiens |
Government | |
• President | Gilles de Robien |
Area | |
• Total | 312 km2 (120 sq mi) |
Population (2005) | |
• Total | 177,345[1] |
• Density | 577/km2 (1,490/sq mi) |
Budget |
295,845,311 € (BP 2006) with 98,796,417 € invested |
Website | http://www.amiens.fr |
The Communauté d'agglomération Amiens Métropole is a communauté d'agglomération in the Somme département and in the Picardie région of France.
History
In 1991 a study was started by SIEPA (Syndicat Intercommunal d'Etude et de Amiénois Programming), which was the origin of Greater Amiens, established in 1994 with 18 municipalities.
Pursuant to the Chevènement Act, 2000, it was turned into a communauté d'agglomération, Amiens Métropole, which then encompassed 20 communes with the arrival of Allonville and Bertangles.
Since then, Amiens Métropole has continued to add more communes : 2003, with 21 municipalities, 2004 with 27 municipalities, and in 2007, 33 municipalities.
Composition
This Communauté d'agglomération comprises 33 communes:
- Allonville
- Amiens
- Bertangles
- Blangy-Tronville
- Bovelles
- Boves
- Cagny
- Camon
- Clairy-Saulchoix
- Creuse
- Dreuil-lès-Amiens
- Dury
- Estrées-sur-Noye
- Glisy
- Grattepanche
- Guignemicourt
- Hébécourt
- Longueau
- Pissy
- Pont-de-Metz
- Poulainville
- Remiencourt
- Revelles
- Rivery
- Rumigny
- Sains-en-Amiénois
- Saint-Fuscien
- Saint-Sauflieu
- Saleux
- Salouël
- Saveuse
- Thézy-Glimont
- Vers-sur-Selles
Responsibilities
- Action for Economic Development (Support for industrial, commercial or employment, support agricultural and forestry activities)
- Action to promote housing for the disadvantaged
- Advocacy
- Sanitation
- Waste Collection and household treatment
- Construction and development, maintenance and management of equipment or cultural institutions, socio-cultural, socio-educational, sports
- Design, development and maintenance of the roads
- Design, development, maintenance and management of business areas (industrial, commercial, service, craft or tourist)
- Design, development, maintenance and management of port or airport activities
- Crematorium
- Contractual urban development, community development and economic and social integration
- Local crime prevention
- Water (treatment, supply, distribution)[2]
- Research and Programming
- Noise control
- IT networking (Internet, cable)
- Operation scheduled for improving habitat (OPAH)
- Urban Transport Organization
- Housing policy
- Agenda local housing
- Protection and enhancement of the environment
- Air Quality
- Tourism
- Rubbish processing[3]
Tax and budget
The community is financed by the single business tax (15.27% 2006), which replaces the taxes once payable by the member communes.
See also
Sources
- Article de Paul Oudart "Amiens métropole" de la revue Mappemonde N°65 (2002-1) (French)
- le splaf (French)
- la base aspic (French)
References
- ↑ Amiens Métropole, Rapport d'activité 2005, (page consultée le 8 mai 2007), http://www.amiens.fr/citoyen/rapport-activite-2005.pdf (French)
- ↑ Amiens Métropole distributed 15,125,988 cubic metres of drinking water to 37,542 subscribers in 2005
- ↑ SOURCE : base de donnée ASPIC du ministère de l'intérieur (French)