Samt Starnberg Regional Office Starnberg Strandbadstraße 2 82319 Starnberg
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Landratsamt Starnberg Regional Office Starnberg Strandbadstraße 2 82319 Starnberg You can reach us by public transportation: S 6 Starnberg Bahnhof Nord (Trainstation North) or Bahnhof See (Trainstation Lakeside) and bus stop »Landratsamt« Facts | Figures | Information I From Then to Now I Geography I The Administrative Bodies of the County I The County Budget 2013 I Investments/Economy and Housing I Homes/Area and Population I Population developement and Education I Twin Counties/Health and Social Welfare I Sports/Children and Youth I Building/ Environment and Recreation I Tourism and Traffic I Starnberg County Coat of Arms I The Starnberg County Hall Logo I 2013 Facts – Figures – Information The beauty of its landscape, lying between Lake Starnberg and Lake Ammer, with the Bavarian Alps to the south and the state capital Munich to the north, the high quality of recreation and leisure the region offers, and much more add up to make Starnberg County an attractive magnet for guests from near and far, and a home much loved by its citizens. This brochure contains a summary of various interesting statistics about Starnberg County. 3 Contents From Then to Now... 5 Geography 6 The Administrative Bodies of the County 7 The County Budget 2013 8 Investments/Economy and Housing 9 Homes/Area and Population 10 Population developement and Education 11 Twin Counties/Health and Social Welfare 12 Sports/Children and Youth 13 Building/Environment and Recreation 14 Tourism and Traffic 15 Starnberg County Coat of Arms 16 The Starnberg County Hall Logo 17 4 From Then to Now... On 1 October 1902, Starnberg and Wolfratshausen became two independent royal counties, super- seeding the previously dissolved royal county of Munich II, as decreed by Prince Regent Luitpold of Bavaria in a royal ordinance. Today the county still covers the area thus outlined. When the local government was restructured in 1972, the formerly independent municipalities of Bachhausen and Höhenrain were taken out of what was formerly Wolfratshausen County into Starnberg County. The restructuring of 1978 then reduced the number of municipalities from the 42 original ones to 14. Starnberg County is one of the most attractive of the 20 counties in the administrative region of Upper Bavaria, thanks to its generously appointed vacation areas in the »five lakes region«, a name derived from Lakes Starnberg, Ammer, Pilsen, Weßlingen, and Wörth. Nearly three quarters of the county are under environmental protection and nature conservation. The visitor will encounter a varied and intact landscape in which to relax. In addition to its attractiveness as a vacation area, the county is a highly sought-after residential area due to its proximity to the state capital Munich on the one hand, and to the Alps on the other. 5 Geography Starnberg County highest elevation: 750 m in Berndorfer Buchet, near Obertraubing, Municipality Tutzing lowest point: 533 m in Ampermoos, Municipality Inning area: North – South 35.1 km East – West 22.7 km 6 The Administrative Bodies of the County (legislative period 2008 - 2014) County Administrator: Karl Roth (CSU) since 1 May 2008 Deputy County Administrator: Albert Luppart (FW) since 8 May 2008 Second Deputy County Administrator: Brigitte Servatius (SPD) since 8 May 2008 County Council (elections 2008) (60 council members and county administrator): Party/constituency seats faction chairman CSU 23 Harald Schwab SPD 9 Tim Weidner FW-FREE VOTERS 9 Albert Luppart UNION 90/THE GREENS 10 Anton Maier FDP 7 Sigrid Friedl- Lausenmeyer ödp and Independents 2 Ulrich Ellwanger 7 The County Budget 2012 1 total budget (without economic 121,117,000 plan Starnberg Clinic) administrative budget 105,417,000 assets 15,700,000 final allocations 157,791,000 allocations per capita state average compare Upp Bav. 1,199.19 1 880.52 1 3rd place projected reserves, as of Jan. 2013 16,351,000 Major revenues redistributed revenues (48.40 %) 76,371,000 keyed revenues 5,373,000 lump allocations 2,189,000 costs borne by County Hall 2,900,000 land transfer tax 3,500,000 revenues in social welfare 8,746,000 (income support, housing subsidies, support for victims of war, support for young people) Major expenditures general administration 8,887,000 public safety and security 2,976,000 schools 13,941,000 welfare 29,191,000 health, sports, recreation 3,803,000 housing and construction, transport 2,771,000 public institutions, economic promotion 3,577,000 allocations to the administrative region 34,717,000 (collection rate 24.80 %) county dept (edited: Jan. 2013) 10,782,000 Level of debt (without County Clinic) Starnberg County State average 81,5 1 238 1 per capita per capita (edited: June 2012) (edited: Dec. 2011) 8 Investments/Economy and Housing Major investments and measures promoting investment from 2013 to 2016 1 granting loans to municipalities and municipal associations for the construction and refurbishment of junior high schools und high schools (grammar schools) 34,778,100 construction of a technical secondary/ higher-level secondary vocational college (FOS/BOS) in Starnberg county 13,000,000 Roof refurbishment measures of administrative building 3,100,000 establishment of a new language and data network in the District Administrative Office 2,500,000 refurbishment of Electrical installations in District Administrative Office 2,360,000 extension of administrative building 6,100,000 general refurbishment of the Five Lakes County School of Starnberg 1,612,000 grantmaking for affordable domestic housing projects and rental housing construction projects according to county guidelines 1,148,012 road construction projects on county roads STA 1, 3, 6, 7 and 9 2,155,000 Economy (edited: June 2011) companies 10,487 enterprises 10,832 Employees: 40,432 industry 11,732 trade, hotel and restaurant industry and transportation 8,205 services 20,303 farming and forestry 192 unemployment rate (edited: Dec. 2012) 2.7 % Housing (edited: Dec. 2011) residential buildings 31,317 residential rooms 282,316 9 housing subsidies 2011 subsidized apartments 23 Homes/Area and Population Households (edited: Jan. 2013) 67,355 Area and Population Municipality Mayor inhabitants per area update June 2012 km2 km2 Andechs Anna Elisabeth Neppel (BG) 3,340 83 40.44 Berg Rupert Monn (EUW) 8,279 226 36.63 Feldafing Bernhard Sontheim (BGF) 4,366 477 9.15 Gauting Brigitte Servatius (SPD) 20,315 366 55.51 Gilching Manfred Walter (SPD) 17,583 567 31.50 Herrsching Christian Schiller (EBfA) 10,221 490 20.88 Inning Werner Röslmaier (FBB) 4,420 181 24.42 Krailling Christine Borst (CSU) 7,663 479 15.99 Pöcking Rainer Schnitzler (PWG) 5,661 270 20.96 Seefeld Wolfram Gum (CSU) 7,053 202 34.87 Starnberg Ferdinand Pfaffinger (BLS) 23,410 379 61.84 Tutzing Dr. jur. Stephan Wanner (EBfaT) 9,571 268 35.65 Weßling Michael Muther (PWG) 5,288 234 22.60 Wörthsee Peter Flach (CSU) 4,886 239 20.42 Nonmunicipal area 62.17 County total 132,326 307 493.03 Share of residents from abroad (edited: June 2012) total percent 14,578 11.00 Population structure (edited: Dec. 2012) total male female - 18 23,607 12,176 11,431 18 - 40 28,957 14,125 14,832 40 - 65 49,379 23,662 25,717 65 and older 29,648 13,181 16,467 population clensity 307 people per sq km 10 Population development and Education Population development from 1950 to 2012 1950 65,463 inhabitants 1960 73,704 inhabitants 1970 88,221 inhabitants 1980 106,656 inhabitants 1985 111,852 inhabitants 1990 114,597 inhabitants 1995 119,523 inhabitants 2000 124,956 inhabitants 2005 129,091 inhabitants 2010 130,283 inhabitants 2012 (30 June) 132,326 inhabitants Education system pupils schools primary and middle schools 7,418 29 (including the private primary and middle schools) remedial schools 332 3 junior high school 2,872 4 high schools (grammar schools) 5,257 6 public vocational schools 1,717 1 vocational schools 491 5 adult education (edited: 2011) courses participants 4 adult education institutes 2,800 28,742 (edited: Jan. 2012) students hours/week 6 music academies 3,818 2,005 11 Twin Counties/Health and Social Welfare Twin Counties size km2 population partnership Bad Dürkheim 594 134,000 since 1982 in the Palatinate New Taipei City 2,052 3.9 million since 1985 on Taiwan Health service (edited: Dec. 2012) 11 hospitals 1,471 beds Practicing physicians 355 Pharmacies 42 Institutions of social welfare (edited: Dez. 2012) institutions places Places in old people‘s homes and geriatric nursing places 13 1.161 Places in residential facilities 79 Nursing care places 1.082 Somatic nursing places 913 Gerontopsychiatric nursing places 169 Nursing home places (House of Friend - Haus der Freunde) 1 23 Ambulatory Care assisted residential communities 2 18 Places of residence for disabled people 5 183 Socio-therapeutic nursing places 1 32 Total 22 1.417 12 Sports/Children and Youth Institutions for leisure and sports (edited: Jan. 2013) sports clubs 110 members 46,194 including children 13,090 including teenagers 4,701 rifle associations 53 members 3,881 Kindergartens and day nursery (edited: Jan. 2012) total places capacity kindergartens 72 3,832 day nursery 17 908 crèches 23 510 network for children 3 75 child care centers 11 881 day-care centres total 126 6,206 including: independent associations 90 parochia 22 private 14 Institutions for young people 1 mountain youth hostel, Jugendbergheim Dr. Irlinger in Unterammergau 6 youth centers (Gauting, Gilching, Herrsching, Seefeld, Starnberg, Pöcking) with trained personnel 3 self-governing youth clubs (houses/rooms) (Inning, Weßling, Wörthsee) 1 youth hostel and youth