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Honduran Government
Honduras is administratively divided into
eighteen
departments: | Atlántida, Choluteca, Colón,
Comayagua, Copán, Cortés, El Paraíso, Francisco Morazán, Gracias a
Dios, Intibucá, Islas de la Bahía (Bay Islands), La Paz, Lempira,
Ocotepeque, Olancho, Santa Bárbara, Valle, and Yoro), each with a
designated department capital (cabecera). The president of
the republic freely appoints, and may freely remove, governors for
each department.
Departmental governors represent the
executive branch in official acts in their department and serve as
the tie between the executive branch and other national agencies and
institutions that might have delegations working in the department.
Each governor may freely appoint and remove a secretary to assist
him or her. If a governor is absent more than five days, the mayor
of the departmental capital substitutes for the governor. The costs
of running the departmental governments fall under the budget of the
Ministry of Government and Justice.
The departments are further
divided into 291 municipalities (municipios) nationwide,
including a Central District consisting of the cities of Tegucigalpa
and Comayagüela. A municipality in Honduras may include more than
one city within its boundaries, and is therefore similar to the
jurisdiction of county in the United States. In addition to cities,
municipalities may also include aldeas (villages) and
caseríos (hamlets), which are scattered concentrations of
populations outside urban areas. The urbanized cities may be divided
into smaller divisions known as colonias (colonies) and
barrios (neighborhoods).
The municipalities are
administered by elected corporations, deliberative organs that are
accountable to the courts of justice for abuses, and are supposed to
be autonomous or independent of the central government's powers. The
municipal corporations consist of a mayor (alcalde), who is
the paramount executive authority in a municipality, and a municipal
council that varies in size depending on the population of the
municipality.
Those municipalities with a population of
less than 5,000 have four council members, those with a population
of between 5,000 and 10,000 have six, and those with a population
between 10,000 and 80,000 have eight. All the department capitals,
regardless of their population, and municipalities with a population
of more than 80,000 have ten council members.
The municipal corporations
meet at least two times per month in ordinary sessions, but special
sessions may be called by the mayor or by at least two council
members. Each municipal corporation has a
secretary, freely appointed and removed by a majority of the members
of the corporation, and a treasurer, named by the corporation at the
request of the mayor. Municipalities with annual revenue of more
than one million lempiras are to have an auditor named by the
municipal corporation; however, in the early 1990s, the majority of
Honduran municipalities had an annual revenue of less than one
million lempiras.
The constitution sets forth
several provisions regarding the municipalities. According to
Article 299, the economic and social development of the
municipalities must form part of the nation's development plans.
Each municipality is also to have sufficient communal land in order
to ensure its existence and development.
Citizens of
municipalities are entitled to form civic associations, federation,
or confederations in order to ensure the improvement and development
of the municipalities. In general, income and investment taxes in a
municipality are paid into the municipal treasury.
In 1990 a new Law of
Municipalities covering both departmental and municipal
administration superseded the previous municipal law issued in 1927.
The new law set forth the numerous rights and responsibilities of
the municipalities and public administration at the municipal level.
It also outlined the concept of municipal autonomy,
characterized by free elections; free public administration and
decisions; the collection and investment of resources with special
attention on the preservation of the environment; the development,
approval, and administration of a municipal budget; the organization
and management of public services; the right of the municipality to
create its own administrative structure; and municipal control over
natural resources.
The law also outlines twenty-one
functions of the municipal corporations, which include the following
responsibilities: organizing public administration and services,
developing and implementing a municipal budget, appointing public
employees and naming needed public commissions, planning urban
development, and consulting the public through plebiscites on
important municipal issues and through open public meetings with
representatives of the various social sectors of the municipality.
Under the law, each municipality has
a Municipal Development Council named by the corporation and
consisting of representatives of the various economic and social
sectors of the municipality. The Municipal Development Council
functions in an advisory capacity by providing the corporations with
information and input for making decisions. The law also calls for a
special law to be enacted to regulate the organization and
functioning of a national Institute of Municipal Development to
promote the integrated development of municipalities in Honduras.
Traditionally, the central
government in Honduras, whether civilian or military, has dominated
local government, and some observers maintain that local mayors and
municipal corporations have served largely as administrative arms of
the central government. With the return to democratic rule in 1982,
however, there has been a shift, at least in theory, to promote the
economic development and political independence of the
municipalities.
New provisions in the 1982 constitution call
for economic and social development in the municipalities to form
parts of national development programs and outline the right of
citizens to form organizations to ensure the improvement and
development of the municipalities.
The Callejas government emphasized support
for political and administrative decentralization from the executive
branch to the municipalities. In fact, one of the objectives in
establishing the Modernization of the State Commission in 1990 was
to reduce the centralism of the executive branch through the
effective and orderly transfer of functions and resources to the
municipalities in order to fortify their autonomy.
The
promulgation of the new Law of Municipalities in 1990 was further
evidence of the Callejas government's emphasis on municipal
development. Observers noted, however, that the executive branch,
particularly through the decentralized agencies and institutions,
still wielded significant power at the local level in the early
1990s.
One significant measure
approved in 1992 was reform of the nation's electoral law for the
1993 national elections. For the first time, the law would allow
voters to cast their ballots separately for mayoral candidates. In
previous elections, the practice of split-party voting was not
allowed, and the mayors were elected based on the percentage of the
vote received by the presidential candidates.
The reform of
the electoral law is significant in that it makes elected mayors
directly accountable to the electorate and strengthens the
democratic process at the local level. The reform could also
strengthen the chances for the nation's two smaller parties to gain
representation in the municipalities.
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