Township institutions include agricultural service centers, agricultural economic service centers, social affairs centers, cultural service centers, and public health service centers, as well as finance offices, judicial offices, food and drug offices, land offices, industrial and commercial offices, forestry stations, water conservancy stations, animal husbandry stations, township hospitals, police stations, tax bureaus, transportation management offices, and traffic police. Some are managed by township party committees and governments, and some are managed by county bureaus.
Township institutions are managed by township governments and vertically managed by county bureaus; There are unified settings and separate settings; There are several towns and villages that are comprehensively set up, and each town has a unified setting; Some are fully supplied, and some are self-supporting. With the reform of township institutions and vertical reform of departments, the organization setting is chaotic, the subordinate relationship is chaotic, the name function is chaotic, and the staffing is chaotic, which has caused great changes to the personnel management and economic development of townships.