Communauté de communes


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Administrative divisions of France

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(incl. overseas departments)

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A communauté de communes (French: [kɔmynote də kɔmyn], "community of communes") is a federation of municipalities (communes) in France. It forms a framework within which local tasks are carried out together. It is the least-integrated form of intercommunality.

On January 1, 2007, there were 2,400 communautés de communes in France (2,391 in metropolitan France and 9 in the overseas départements), with 26.48 million people living in them.[1] At the 1999 census the population of the communautés de communes ranged from 163,221 inhabitants (Communauté de communes du Grand Parc, gathering Versailles and neighboring communes) to 168 inhabitants (Communauté de communes de la Vallée du Toulourenc, Vaucluse département).

Legal status

The communauté de communes was created by a statute of the French Parliament enacted on February 6, 1992. The statute was modified by the Chevènement Law of 1999.

Unlike the communautés d'agglomération and the communautés urbaines, communautés de communes are not subjected to a minimum threshold of population to come into existence. The only constraint is geographical continuity.

According to the Code général des collectivités territoriales (CGCT) (general law over regional administrative structures), a communauté de communes is a public establishment of inter-communal cooperation (EPCI), formed by several French municipalities, which cover a connected territory without enclave.

In 1999 when the Chevènement Law regulatory modifications came into force, communautés de communes already in existence that did not meet the criterion of geographical continuity were left untouched.

The communes involved build a space of solidarity with a joint project of development, infrastructure building, etc.

Constitutional

The communautés de communes are currently funded by local taxes:

The taxe professionnelle unique is a modified version of the tax whereby a proportion of the monies levied by the communautés des communes is paid back to the individual communes. The taxe professionnelle is sometimes presented as an unfair burden on the economy or even as a device for exporting jobs outside France, and it has been subject to a series of reforms over the years but central government undertakings to abolish it (and presumably to replace it) have yet to come to fruition. If they do, funding of the communautés de communes will change fundamentally.

A communauté de communes is administered by a council (conseil communautaire) made up of delegates from the municipal councils of each member commune. The number of seats allocated to each commune reflects the size of the commune. A member commune must have at least one seat on the council, and no individual commune may have more than half of the seats on the conseil communautaire.

Objectives

Article 5214-16 of the CGCT requires the communauté de communes to exercise its responsibilities in the following policy areas:

The communauté de communes may also choose to exercise its responsibilities in at least one of the following six policy areas:

The communauté de communes may define its own personnel requirements and appoint appropriately qualified employees. In addition, and subject to départemental agreement it may exercise directly powers and responsibilities in certain social policy areas which are more normally handled at the départemental level.

Subject to these requirements, it is for the communes themselves to determine precisely which competences they will delegate to the communauté de communes: they will do this based on their view of the individual commune's best interests. Once powers and responsibilities have been delegated to the communauté de communes, they shall be exercised collectively through the communauté de communes and may no longer be exercised independently by individual member communes.

In 2008 there were 2,393 communautés de communes in France. Of these, roughly 1,000 had been in existence for less than a year. New communautés are currently being created at a more rapid rate than in the early years. Nevertheless, there are still many rural communes that have not joined one of these groupings.

Communautés de communes with more than 60,000 inhabitants

(ranked by population at the March 1999 census, in 2007 limits)
(the largest commune in the communauté de communes follows in parentheses)

  1. Communauté de communes du Grand Parc (Versailles) 163,221 inhabitants
  2. Communauté de communes de la Boucle de la Seine (Sartrouville) 159,997
  3. Communauté de communes du Nord Martinique (Le Robert) 108,470
  4. Communauté de communes du Sud (Le Tampon) 102,958
  5. Communauté de communes du Centre Littoral (Cayenne) 92,059
  6. Communauté de communes du Parisis (Herblay) 80,196
  7. Communauté de communes du Pays Yonnais (La Roche-sur-Yon) 79,665
  8. Communauté de communes Drancy - Le Bourget (Drancy) 74,373
  9. Communauté de communes Cœur d’Ostrevent (Somain) 71,814
  10. Communauté de communes de l'agglomération Creilloise (Creil) 67,818
  11. Communauté de communes de Marne et Chantereine (Chelles) 67,487
  12. Communauté de communes de Châtillon - Montrouge (Montrouge) 66,355
  13. Communauté de communes des Deux Rives de la Seine (Verneuil-sur-Seine) 62,260
  14. Communauté de communes de l'Auxerrois (Auxerre) 62,064

References

External links

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