Some parents want to complain to the Education Bureau because of something, but they don't know how to complain. In fact, we can call or report directly to the government. If you don't want to be retaliated, you can report to the bureau of letters and calls first, because the bureau of letters and calls can report anonymously.
If you complain about the administrative inaction of the Education Bureau, you can complain to the higher authorities of the government by phone or directly. If it is a complaint of the administrative department type, you can report it to the government's letters and calls bureau first. In this case, you will not be retaliated because you can report it anonymously.
If the administrative department of the government exercises the functions of the government department, it may complain to the competent department at the next higher level that does not exercise the functions of the government department. If it is the administrative inaction of the administrative department, you can complain to the government letters and calls bureau first. Administrative omission refers to the state that the administrative subject and its staff have the duties and obligations to actively implement administrative acts, and should perform them without performing or delaying the performance of their statutory duties.
It is believed that administrative omission refers to an administrative act in which the administrative subject fails to perform specific legal obligations and has no clear intention in procedure. The so-called "inaction" behavior in administration is based on the qualification application of citizens, legal persons or other organizations, and the administrative organ shall carry out certain acts or perform certain statutory duties according to law.
An administrative illegal act in which an administrative organ refuses to act without justifiable reasons is also called "illegal omission" or "negative illegal act".
Whether the establishment of administrative omission needs to be conditional on the request of the counterpart, that is, it only constitutes administrative omission when the counterpart requests and the administrative subject fails to fulfill its legal obligations; When the administrative counterpart does not make a request, can the inaction of the administrative subject be regarded as administrative inaction?
Theoretically speaking, since the duties of the administrative subject are legal, the administrative subject should strictly perform them according to law, and should not be conditional on whether the other party is applicable; However, in practice, the performance of the duties of the administrative subject often points to the protection of the rights and interests of a specific counterpart, and there is the possibility that the counterpart may know without asking the administrative subject.