The state land cadastre of belarus moving forwardLAZOVOY
The State Land Cadastre of Belarus has made progress in digitizing and streamlining the real property registration system. About 60-70% of land parcels, buildings, and apartments are now registered. Key developments include establishing a network of registration agencies in 2000, adopting legislation in 2002, digitizing registration in 2004, and creating web services starting in 2005. The registration process takes about a week and involves various agencies. The National Cadastral Agency oversees quality control and provides public access to registration data and reports through various e-services portals. Plans are underway to fully digitize paper archives, implement an extraterritorial registration system, and launch a new NKA_NET3 system for real-time online registration
An improved, productive, skilled, innovative and efficient sector копияLAZOVOY
This document summarizes New Zealand's efforts to reform its building control system. The key points are:
1) New Zealand has implemented reforms such as establishing a central government agency to administer building functions, requiring building consent authorities to become accredited, and adopting a risk-based and streamlined building consent process.
2) The goals of the reforms are to establish national standards for building design, construction and inspection, improve consumer protection, and make the building approval process more consistent, transparent and efficient across the country.
3) New Zealand is working to digitize building and location data through its GeoBuild program, which aims to create a national information exchange framework and accelerate the use of building information modeling.
Legal and institutional frameworks for secured lendingLAZOVOY
This document discusses frameworks for secured lending reform in Russia. It addresses antecedent work identifying deficiencies in existing law and developing proposed amendments. The key components of a new legal framework are described: comprehensive coverage of all security interests; a functional approach not defined by legal forms; flexibility allowing party autonomy; and simplicity with minimal formalities. Priority and enforcement rules are also outlined, with an emphasis on establishing transparency through a centralized electronic registry to determine priority based on registration time. The goal is to modernize Russian law to facilitate secured lending consistent with international best practices.
1) Obtaining construction permits in Poland is a lengthy and cumbersome process, taking 10 months and 29 procedures, which places Poland in 161st place globally in terms of ease of obtaining construction permits.
2) The World Bank recommends several reforms to streamline the construction permitting process in Poland, including shortening statutory approval limits, using a risk-based approach, and cautiously applying the "silence is consent" principle.
3) Medium-term reforms proposed include streamlining procedures, consolidating post-completion inspections, and having utilities issue public guidelines to simplify technical conditions for projects.
The state land cadastre of belarus moving forwardLAZOVOY
The State Land Cadastre of Belarus has made progress in digitizing and streamlining the real property registration system. About 60-70% of land parcels, buildings, and apartments are now registered. Key developments include establishing a network of registration agencies in 2000, adopting legislation in 2002, digitizing registration in 2004, and creating web services starting in 2005. The registration process takes about a week and involves various agencies. The National Cadastral Agency oversees quality control and provides public access to registration data and reports through various e-services portals. Plans are underway to fully digitize paper archives, implement an extraterritorial registration system, and launch a new NKA_NET3 system for real-time online registration
An improved, productive, skilled, innovative and efficient sector копияLAZOVOY
This document summarizes New Zealand's efforts to reform its building control system. The key points are:
1) New Zealand has implemented reforms such as establishing a central government agency to administer building functions, requiring building consent authorities to become accredited, and adopting a risk-based and streamlined building consent process.
2) The goals of the reforms are to establish national standards for building design, construction and inspection, improve consumer protection, and make the building approval process more consistent, transparent and efficient across the country.
3) New Zealand is working to digitize building and location data through its GeoBuild program, which aims to create a national information exchange framework and accelerate the use of building information modeling.
Legal and institutional frameworks for secured lendingLAZOVOY
This document discusses frameworks for secured lending reform in Russia. It addresses antecedent work identifying deficiencies in existing law and developing proposed amendments. The key components of a new legal framework are described: comprehensive coverage of all security interests; a functional approach not defined by legal forms; flexibility allowing party autonomy; and simplicity with minimal formalities. Priority and enforcement rules are also outlined, with an emphasis on establishing transparency through a centralized electronic registry to determine priority based on registration time. The goal is to modernize Russian law to facilitate secured lending consistent with international best practices.
1) Obtaining construction permits in Poland is a lengthy and cumbersome process, taking 10 months and 29 procedures, which places Poland in 161st place globally in terms of ease of obtaining construction permits.
2) The World Bank recommends several reforms to streamline the construction permitting process in Poland, including shortening statutory approval limits, using a risk-based approach, and cautiously applying the "silence is consent" principle.
3) Medium-term reforms proposed include streamlining procedures, consolidating post-completion inspections, and having utilities issue public guidelines to simplify technical conditions for projects.