Gyeonggi Province will conduct a comprehensive inspection of surveying business registration companies operating from April to the end of September.
The inspection targets a total of 1,300 companies, including 184 public surveying companies, 984 general surveying companies, 48 cadastral surveying companies, and 84 companies that are temporarily closed or out of business.
The main inspection items include ▲ compliance with legal registration standards for surveying technicians and surveying equipment ▲ reporting of changes in technical personnel, business name, representative, location, and equipment as registered in the surveying business ▲ expiration of the validity period of surveying equipment performance inspections, among others.
Gyeonggi Province will review legal violations through a first written inspection by sending advance notices and self-inspection checklists to companies. Subsequently, companies that were temporarily closed, out of business, or had their registration canceled last year, those suspected of not meeting registration standards, and those that did not respond to the self-inspection will undergo a second on-site inspection.
If illegal activities are detected as a result of the inspection, administrative measures such as fines or cancellation of registration will be imposed.
Last year, Gyeonggi Province identified a total of 58 companies through a comprehensive inspection, including 4 cases of failure to meet registration standards, 32 cases of delayed change reporting, and 18 cases of delayed surveying equipment performance inspections.
Kim Yong-jae, Director of the Land Information Division of Gyeonggi Province, said, "We will systematically manage the operation status of surveying companies to provide high-quality surveying services to the residents."
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