Pulang Pisau Regency Discusses Formation of Regent's Regulation on Riverbank Management
Pulang Pisau (ANTARA) - The Deputy Regent of Pulang Pisau, Central Kalimantan, Ahmad Jayadikarta, has affirmed the importance of establishing a regent's regulation (perbup) concerning the management of cross-sector licensing for riverbanks, river buffer zones, and river and lake transportation that are not listed in the Indonesian Standard Industrial Classification (KBLI) within the Online Single Submission (OSS) system.
"The meeting was indeed quite intense, particularly regarding the discussion of the perbup for riverbank management and licensing in the transportation sector. This regulation must not contravene the KBLI, which has been compiled by the Central Statistics Agency (BPS) and serves as the reference for OSS," said Ahmad Jayadikarta in Pulang Pisau on Monday.
He noted that the perbup does not only concern the transportation sector but also other sectors such as the Environment Agency (DLH) and the Public Works and Spatial Planning Agency (PUPR), where several sub-activities are not specifically determined by the central government.
"Initially, we hoped this initiative could generate Local Own-Source Revenue (PAD), but following the programme from the President of the Republic of Indonesia, regions can no longer arbitrarily collect PAD," he explained.
According to him, the formation of this perbup is important because many community activities, particularly along riverbanks and flatlands, do not yet have technical regulations at the regional level.
The Head of the Pulang Pisau Transportation Agency (Dishub), Supriyadi, stated that the formation of the perbup is intended to fulfil the mandate of Law Number 25 of 2009 on Public Services, which has not been fully implemented at the technical level in the regions.
"Regions can adjust regulations whilst still following the KBLI. Many community activities, even in the health sector, are not included in the KBLI, so there needs to be a legal umbrella through a perbup," Supriyadi explained.
He said that many business activities take place in locations such as riverbanks, roadsides, and flatlands that are not actually accommodated within the national OSS system, despite these activities being predominantly in the small and medium enterprise sector.
"This is important so that community business activities can continue to operate, yet remain within the legal framework and under supervision," he said.
Supriyadi added that the perbup is expected to serve as a regional reference for developing cross-sector service and supervision systems, particularly in public spaces that have hitherto not been included in the OSS system.
"The meeting was indeed quite intense, particularly regarding the discussion of the perbup for riverbank management and licensing in the transportation sector. This regulation must not contravene the KBLI, which has been compiled by the Central Statistics Agency (BPS) and serves as the reference for OSS," said Ahmad Jayadikarta in Pulang Pisau on Monday.
He noted that the perbup does not only concern the transportation sector but also other sectors such as the Environment Agency (DLH) and the Public Works and Spatial Planning Agency (PUPR), where several sub-activities are not specifically determined by the central government.
"Initially, we hoped this initiative could generate Local Own-Source Revenue (PAD), but following the programme from the President of the Republic of Indonesia, regions can no longer arbitrarily collect PAD," he explained.
According to him, the formation of this perbup is important because many community activities, particularly along riverbanks and flatlands, do not yet have technical regulations at the regional level.
The Head of the Pulang Pisau Transportation Agency (Dishub), Supriyadi, stated that the formation of the perbup is intended to fulfil the mandate of Law Number 25 of 2009 on Public Services, which has not been fully implemented at the technical level in the regions.
"Regions can adjust regulations whilst still following the KBLI. Many community activities, even in the health sector, are not included in the KBLI, so there needs to be a legal umbrella through a perbup," Supriyadi explained.
He said that many business activities take place in locations such as riverbanks, roadsides, and flatlands that are not actually accommodated within the national OSS system, despite these activities being predominantly in the small and medium enterprise sector.
"This is important so that community business activities can continue to operate, yet remain within the legal framework and under supervision," he said.
Supriyadi added that the perbup is expected to serve as a regional reference for developing cross-sector service and supervision systems, particularly in public spaces that have hitherto not been included in the OSS system.