Hampyeong-gun 'Gongyunuri' Opens and Shares 33 Public Facilities Owned by the County

Hampyeong-gun 'Gongyunuri' Opens and Shares 33 Public Facilities Owned by the County 원본보기 아이콘


[Asia Economy Honam Reporting Headquarters Reporter Yoon Jamin] Hampyeong-gun, Jeollanam-do (Governor Lee Sang-ik) announced on the 19th that it will open and share 33 public facilities owned by the county through the integrated portal ‘Gongyunu-ri’.


Gongyunu-ri is an integrated portal for opening and sharing public resources, built through collaboration between the Ministry of the Interior and Safety and the Public Procurement Service as part of government innovation and national tasks.


The project started in June last year and was launched in March this year, allowing anyone to use office facilities and goods owned by public institutions (central and local governments) during idle times.


Until now, shared resources owned by public institutions could only be used after the general public applied by phone and received approval from the person in charge.


There were many inconveniences, such as having to search for necessary resource information directly on the Government24 website.


With the establishment of Gongyunu-ri, public open resources owned by public institutions nationwide can now be searched and reserved for use in one integrated portal.


Hampyeong-gun also registered a total of 33 public resources it owns on Gongyunu-ri this time, enabling anyone to efficiently use local public resources.


The main open facilities registered by the county include the county library, county art museum, town and township office meeting rooms, and public parking lots.


Going forward, the county plans to continuously expand the registration of new public resources on Gongyunu-ri so that residents can use local public facilities more conveniently.


A county official said, “The newly established Gongyunu-ri will allow more residents to enjoy diverse and useful shared service benefits,” and added, “We hope many residents will show interest in and use Gongyunu-ri.”

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