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涉及事项304项,青岛城阳“轻微不罚”3.0版事项清单发布
Qi Lu Wan Bao Wang·2025-08-06 09:50

Core Viewpoint - The Qingdao City Chengyang District has introduced the "Minor Violations Not Subject to Administrative Penalties and General Violations Reduced Administrative Penalties List (2025 Edition)", expanding the scope of minor violations and reducing the burden on enterprises [1][3]. Group 1: Implementation and Impact - The "Minor Violations Not Subject to Administrative Penalties 2.0" list was implemented at the beginning of the year, resulting in 443 cases processed by the end of July, which is 4.7 times the number from the same period last year [3][5]. - The implementation has led to a reduction of fines totaling 51.36 million yuan, which is 20.5 times higher than the same period last year [3][5]. - The "first violation not penalized" policy has been cautiously promoted, resulting in 75 enterprises being exempted from fines totaling 32.81 million yuan, receiving broad recognition from market entities [3][5]. Group 2: Upgrades in the 2025 Edition - The "Minor Violations Not Subject to Administrative Penalties 3.0" version includes 304 minor violation items, an increase of 162 items from the previous version, representing a 1.14 times expansion [4][5]. - The focus has shifted to three main areas: urban management, cultural tourism, and transportation, with significant increases in the number of items in each area [5][6]. - The new version introduces 29 items for reducing penalties for general violations, further extending the boundaries of lenient enforcement [6]. Group 3: Coverage of Violations - The 3.0 version covers a wide range of sectors, including urban management, cultural tourism, business, transportation, highways, agriculture, and agricultural machinery, with a total of 304 minor violation items [6]. - Specific examples of minor violations in urban management include improper signage and failure to update gas operation licenses [6]. - In cultural tourism, violations include failure to retain materials as per publishing regulations and unauthorized changes to travel itineraries [6].