Archive for the ‘Local government’ Category
Saturday, October 10th, 2009
Qingchuan County, northern Sichuan.
After the earthquake destroyed many of the local village schools in Qingchuan County, it was decided that rather than rebuild each small school, a large central school would be built in the nearest town. Unfortunately, for many of these villages the nearest town could be more than twenty kilometres away, along roads that have frequently been blocked by landslides, or made inaccessible by local rivers bursting their banks during the rainy season.
Villages such as Liping, Yanyan, Minzhu and Shuimo have all been told that their school-age children must now attend the central school in Qima Town. For some parents, this means sending their child to board at the school — a cost of 120 RMB a month; for many, it means renting a place in Lijiaguo, close to Qima, costing up to 600 RMB a month including food and utilities. That’s around 6000 RMB per academic year in a region where annual earnings are approximately half that amount. This kind of expense cannot be borne for long, and already more than half of the students from these villages are staying at home instead of going to the central school, receiving no schooling whatsoever.
The situation is the same all over the county: students from Heping Village — some two hundred of them — must not only travel by road, but spend forty minutes on the river in order to reach Yingpan Central Primary School; Jinjiaping is three or four hours walk away from Maoba Central Primary School; Sandui is five kilometres along mountain roads from Shazhou. The list goes on.
The villagers overwhelmingly want their own local schools to be rebuilt; impressively, more than thirteen villages in Qingchuan County have won an agreement from the local education bureau that, provided they find the funding to rebuild the school themselves, then teachers will be supplied and the school will be permitted run.
The people of Liping have led the way in raising money, from within their own community and from companies further afield, and succeeded in building a 120-square-metre school — more than enough to educate all of the local children and with room to grow. But they were aghast to be told, when they applied for the permit to begin operations, the education bureau had apparently specified that village schools must be larger than 200 square metres in order to qualify. No-one had heard of this restriction while the school was being planned.
Further confusion ensued when the representatives from Yanyan — a village that had had its own school for almost fifty years before the quake — started work on their own plans for a school, necessarily bigger than 200 square metres, only to be told that it must be at least 300 square metres if it was to be allowed to hire teachers, despite being barely six kilometres (as the crow flies) from Liping. People started to wonder if the central school in Qima was having a hand in these policy-switches in order to keep as many students (and with them, more funding) for themselves.
But the people in Liping could not bear the thought of their time, money, and hard work going to waste — not to mention choosing between struggling to afford to send their child to the central school, or having no education at all. They pleaded with the education bureau to overlook the size-restriction and — thanks in large part to a relative of the community being an employee at the bureau — they were at last granted the permit. Classes will begin again at Liping Village Elementary School from next semester.
The other villages we have mentioned are not so lucky to have friends in high places, and are stuck either wondering if they should risk going ahead to rebuild a school that may not be permitted to run, or struggling to locate the funds to rebuild their own schools at all. SQR is monitoring the situation to determine if anything can be done for these other villages, collectively or individually.
Tags:bureacracy, education, funding, Liping, map, Qima, Qingchuan, rebuilding, research, schools, Shuimo, Yannian, Yanyan
Posted in Civil society, Facilities reconstruction, Local government | No Comments »
Saturday, July 25th, 2009
Baoxing, according to government reports, was one of the worst affected areas in the 12 May 2008 earthquake; 3 died, 338 were injured and altogether more than 41,000 people were affected in Baoxing, which is 80% of the total population in the county.
More than 800 houses collapsed, and up till May 11th 2009, 652 of them had commenced reconstruction and 435 had completed reconstruction. 2 middle schools are being rebuilt with the help of Hainan province and 1 Hope Elementary school has been donated by a central government research office in the most affected town called Raozi, which is of Tibetan ethnicity.
Online sources.
Tags:Baoxing, Hainan, Hope Elementary School, house, middle school, Raozi, reconstruction, Tibetan
Posted in Construction and infrastructure, Education, Facilities reconstruction, Home rebuilding, Infrastructure, Local government, National government, Official news source | No Comments »
Wednesday, May 27th, 2009
China to open earthquake areas to tourists: report (AP)
CHINESE authorities said today they would open areas devastated by last year’s Sichuan earthquake to tourists as the region struggles to recover from the natural disaster, state media reported.
Nearly 87,000 people were killed or went missing in the May 12 magnitude 8.0 earthquake that left millions homeless and unemployed in China’s mountainous southwest region.
“There is a huge tourism market in the ruins one year after the quake,” Xinhua news agency quoted Wu Mian, deputy director of Sichuan’s tourism bureau, as saying.
“We cannot block the tourists out. We also hope the tourists watch their behaviour and not hurt the feelings of quake survivors.”
Officials hope that increased tourism will help spur rebuilding efforts in the area, it said.
Tags:Associated Press, Deputy Director of Sichuan Tourism Bureau, Donghekou, Donghekou Earthquake Relics Park, Donghekou village, Dujiangyan, Guangyuan, Mianzhu, Pengzhou, Sichuan Tourism Bureau, tourism, Wu Mian, Xinhua, Yingxiu, Yingxiu Township
Posted in Construction and infrastructure, Enterprise, Facilities reconstruction, Local government, Tourism | No Comments »
Friday, May 22nd, 2009
Poverty is inevitably still a huge problem, given the impact of the earthquake on areas which were living at subsistence level.
Information about Qima Township in Qingchuan obtained by SQR in the past few days.
Basic Situation
6 hours drive from Chengdu, 1 hour from Qinchuan County. The road connecting villages and townships can get rather muddy when rains but accessible.
The nearest NGO (World Vision International, which set up its office there before the earthquake) working in Qingchuan is in Qiaozhuang Township, 1 hour drive away from Qima.
There are 8000 residents, many of them are suffering from rheumatism, cholelithiasis, gall-stones, and cardiovascular and cerebrovascular diseases. The township does have a public clinic but only with limited facilities and meds, so the doctors working there are not able to treat illnesses like these.
According to the figures collected by a local volunteer, there are 600+ patients who cannot afford even ordinary medical services. This group of people consists mostly of elderly people without children or living by themselves while children are working somewhere else.
Progress of reconstruction is uneven. Better-off families have already had their new houses built and have moved in. However, many families just finished the foundation part as to claim the subsidy (the policy is that full subsidy is issued only to families that begin reconstruction before 12th May 2009). Some people, as in Caopo, have been using the subsidy or micro-credit to cover their basic necessities, rather than to reconstruct their houses.
There is one central primary school (1-9 grade), and four village primary schools, with 704 students in total. Grades 1 to 3 include 48 preschool students and 48 students from the village primary schools.
The village primary schools provide classes for one specific group only: for Grade 1 students who live too far away from the central school and cannot afford to live in a school dormitory, and each has around 10-20 students.
Students now have classes in a row of prefabricated houses. More than 400 of them live in villages far from this school. They do not pay tuition fees but do have to buy ‘meal tickets’ that are used to buy meals in the school dining room, the cost of which ranges from 80 to 200 per month, depending on the financial situation of students’ families.
Recent Activities
1. Children’s Day
Various people (contacts of SQR) are going to Qima Primary School on the Children’s Day. The school will have its own activities in the morning, and then the students have their own in the afternoon. One suggestion is for 4-7 people to visit the children to organise activities for them. The thing these people need help with is to buy gifts for the 704 students and to fund the delivery.
2. Jun 28th free-of-charge medical consultation
SQR’s contact, Yang, said he’ll notify the locals to come to the central village that day, and will bring a couple of nurses and doctors there. The consultation takes one or two days. Help is needed getting medicine for this trip.
SQR is waiting for the list, and will make it available to those who are willing to help out.
Tags:Caopo, cardiovascular disease, cerebrovascular diseases, Children's Day, cholelithiasis, food, gall-stones, meal tickets, medical care, medical consultation, micro-credit, NGO, pencil case, poverty, prefabricated, primary school, Qiaozhuang township, Qima township, Qingchuan, rheumatism, road, satchel, stationery, subsidy, village school, World Vision International
Posted in Childcare, Civil society, Compensation, Donation, Education, Health care, Home rebuilding, Living conditions, Local government, Micro-funding, SQR | No Comments »
Saturday, April 25th, 2009
Beichuan tourism plan approved
Sichuan province’s Beichuan county, which was devastated by last May’s earthquake, aims to become an internationally renowned travel destination for its Qiang ethnic minority culture, quake ruins and legacy as Xia Dynasty founder Dayu’s birthplace, the county’s tourism development master plan said.
The plan yesterday passed appraisal by more than 40 experts nationwide and officials from Sichuan.
It called for constructing tourism infrastructure from 2009 to 2011.
Tourism would develop dramatically from 2012 to 2015 until Beichuan became a top-class domestic tourist destination, while it would become an internationally leading site for earthquake ruins from 2016 to 2020, the plan said.
The plan also said Beichuan must develop three or four attractions appealing to overseas visitors. Its project list includes an earthquake museum, an ethnic Qiang street and a plaza showcasing local ethnic minority culture. The plan, which the Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences’ tourism research center developed over eight months, will go to the provincial government for approval before post-quake tourism reconstruction begins, said Zhang Jie, an information officer for Mianyang, which administrates Beichuan.
Beichuan was among the counties most devastated by the May 12 earthquake. Of the nearly 70,000 people who died, more than 10,000 were in the county.
Beichuan is the country’s only Qiang autonomous county. It was home to about 90,000 Qiang people prior to the quake, but about 10 percent of them died in the disaster, the county’s publicity department deputy chief Wang Jian said.
The ethnic group is known for living in stone towers resembling fortresses and for worshiping the goat – an animal revered as the god of food and clothing.
Beichuan is best known as the birthplace of Dayu, the legendary founder of the Xia Dynasty (21st century-16th century BC).
Tags:Beichuan, Beichuan tourism, Dayu, Mianyang, overseas visitors, Qiang, ruins, Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences, tourism research centre, tourist destination, Xia Dynasty
Posted in Arts, Ethnic minorities, Facilities reconstruction, Government, Local government, Official news source, Tourism | No Comments »
Monday, April 20th, 2009
European Day Charity Dinner Party
Location: Intercontinental Hotel, Chengdu
Click here for EUCCC website
Taking place on Europe Day at the Intercontinental Hotel in Chengdu, this event will raise money for SQR, specifically for the reconstruction of a primary school in GuangJi.
As well as ticket sales raising money, an array of fabulous prizes will be auctioned off.
SQR will be there, offering information and merchandise to raise awareness and funds.
To book tickets, contact the European Chamber of Commerce in China, Chengdu (Tel: +86 (28) 8671 0577, sxu@euccc.com.cn)
Venue: Intercontinental Century City Chengdu
(88 Century City Boulevard)
Price: 200 RMB for members, 380 RMB for non-members
All event revenue will be donated to SQR, for a defined school project. Many Sichuan & Chengdu government officials and Consuls Generals are invited and the event is supported by the British Consulate General, the Danish Consulate General, the French Consulate General and German Consulate General and the American and British Chamber of Commerce.
Time: 18:30 till late
Tags:benefit, charity, dinner, European Chamber of Commerce in Chengdu, Guangji, kindergarten, raise money
Posted in Civil society, Donation, Education, Facilities reconstruction, Local government, SQR Activities | No Comments »
Tuesday, April 14th, 2009
The Chinese government has promised to help survivors of last year’s devastating Wenchuan earthquake to move into new houses before the end of this year, according to a human rights document published here on Monday.
The rebuilding of collapsed or seriously destroyed farmers’ houses will be basically completed to ensure they can “move into new houses by the end of December 2009,” says the National Human Rights Action Plan of China (2009-2010).The government will take a series of measures to provide jobs for over 1 million people in the restoration areas, with emphasis on finding a job for at least one member of each jobless family, according to the document, published by the Information Office of the State Council, or Cabinet.
In these areas, the state will ensure urban residents’ average disposable income and rural residents’ average net income surpassing the levels before the earthquake, with a secured basic living standard for all people in the quake-devastated areas, says the action plan.
The government will rebuild and restore elementary and middle schools to a higher safety level, and priority is given to restoring and rebuilding county-level hospitals and public service institutions for disease prevention and control, women’s and children’s health care and family planning, as well as township-level clinics and township family planning service centers.
“Persistently supervising and checking the use of relief funds and materials to ensure that they are all sent to and used for people in the disaster-hit areas and for the smooth progress of the rehabilitation and reconstruction work”, says the action plan.
Tags:action plan, average disposable income, basic living standard, Government, house, Information Office of the State Council
Posted in Construction and infrastructure, Education, Facilities reconstruction, Governance and social policy, Government, Home rebuilding, Infrastructure, Living conditions, Local government, National government, Official news source | No Comments »
Monday, April 6th, 2009
Official, expert explain plans for controversial quake museum
www.chinaview.cn 2009-04-01 20:17:26
Special Report: Reconstruction After Earthquake
CHENGDU, April 1 (Xinhua) — A public controversy over spending on a proposed earthquake museum in southwest China’s Sichuan Province has prompted officials to come forward and defend the plans.
The 2.3-billion-yuan (338 million-U.S.-dollar) plan reported by local media comprised costs of other projects in addition to the Beichuan County Earthquake Museum, near the epicenter of last year’s May 12 quake, said Lin Jizhong, deputy director of the county’s Culture and Tourism Bureau Wednesday.
The museum itself would only cost 135 million yuan (20 million U.S. dollars), said Lin.
The news of the plan provoked a public outcry on the Internet after local newspapers reported in late March.
Many people contended that a museum was necessary, but as the province was in dire need of money for reconstruction, investing such a huge amount in the museum was unwise.
Wu Changfu, head of the Shanghai-based project planning expert group which outlined the budget, said, “The money was not used solely for construction of the museum building. The environmental protection work and road construction will also be included in the plan.”
“The feasibility report of the museum is being drafted,” Wu said.
Lin said the planned museum was not just an exhibition building, but encompassed the remnants of the old county seat, and traces left by secondary disasters such as mud-rock flows and quake lakes.
The natural scenery of the Tangjiashan quake lake area and culture of the Qiang ethnic minority would also feature in the attraction.
The entire project covered 8 square kilometers, with the Beichuan Middle School at the center, Lin said.
More than 80,000 people were confirmed dead or missing after the quake.
Premier Wen Jiabao suggested when he was in Beichuan after the quake that a museum should be erected.
Lin said construction was scheduled to start later this year in fall went smoothly.
“We hope the museum can bring more revenue to local people,” he said. “The dead are dead, but we hope the living can live better lives.”
Tags:Beichuan County Earthquake Museum, Beichuan Culture and Tourism Bureau, Beichuan Middle School, Chengdu, controversy, death, environmental protection, epicentre, mud-rock flow, museum, Qiang, quake lake, revenue, Sichuan, Tangjiashan
Posted in Arts, Environment, Facilities reconstruction, Government, Infrastructure, Investment, Local government, National government, Official news source | No Comments »
Monday, April 6th, 2009
China’s quake-hit Sichuan aims to finish most rebuilding by 2010
www.chinaview.cn 2009-04-03 10:57:58
Special Report: Reconstruction After Earthquake
CHENGDU, April 3 (Xinhua) — Southwest China’s Sichuan Province said it would accelerate post-quake rebuilding in an effort to finish most of the work by September 2010, a year ahead of schedule.
The goal is to complete 85 percent of the reconstruction projects and ensure “housing and employment for each family,” according to a provincial meeting for accelerating reconstruction held Thursday.
The completion targets cover more than 90 percent of transport projects, 98 percent of power grids and 99 percent of public service projects such as medical care.
The meeting said 85 percent of the rebuilding work in worst-hit areas, and all work except for some major projects in less-affected areas, would be completed by September 2010.
Reconstruction of rural housing will be completed at the end of this year, with that in townships and cities to be finished before May 2010.
Students who now attend classes in temporary building are to be back in permanent structures by next spring.
The magnitude-8.0 quake that hit southwest China, centered in Wenchuan, Sichuan, on May 12 last year, killed more than 69,000 people. It also left nearly 18,000 missing, more than 374,000 injured and millions homeless.
The Sichuan government estimated post-quake rebuilding will cost about 1.6 trillion yuan (235 billion U.S. dollars)
Tags:Chengdu, Employment, housing, power grid, Sichuan, students, Transport, Wenchuan
Posted in Construction and infrastructure, Employment, Facilities reconstruction, Governance and social policy, Home rebuilding, Infrastructure, Investment, Living conditions, Local government, Official news source, Transport | No Comments »
Monday, March 9th, 2009
March 9, 2009
Chinese Official Defends Construction of Schools Felled in Quake
By KEITH BRADSHER
HONG KONG — A vice governor of the Chinese province hardest hit by the earthquake last May said Sunday that many schools collapsed then because of the strength of the 7.9 magnitude quake, and not because of shoddy construction.
Wei Hong, one of the eight vice governors of Sichuan Province, also declined to release the number of schoolchildren who were killed, saying that the exact tally still had not been calculated almost 10 months later, news agencies reported from Beijing. Mr. Wei spoke to reporters on the sidelines of the National People’s Congress there.
State news media have reported that the quake left more than 80,000 dead and thousands more missing. The most controversial aspect of the quake has been the damage to 14,000 classrooms, half of which collapsed entirely.
Heavy damage to schools, some of which fell down in neighborhoods where other structures remained standing, has prompted accusations from local residents that the schools suffered from what many Chinese have termed “tofu” construction.

Epicentre location as shown in NY Times
Local and provincial officials have responded angrily to criticisms of school construction practices, and particularly to suggestions from some parents that there might have been corruption involved in the construction process for schools. The local authorities have silenced many parents who lost children in the earthquake, through a combination of compensation payments and intimidation.
A mother whose 11-year-old daughter died in the earthquake said by telephone on Sunday that “of course it was tofu construction that led to the collapse of the school.”
The mother, who requested anonymity because of continued government efforts to discourage public discussion of the collapse of the schools, said that she believed that the government must have a tally of schoolchildren who died in the earthquake, since communities in her area were well aware of death tolls at their local schools.
Mr. Wei was promoted to vice governor on June 1, less than three weeks after the quake on May 12, part of a series of shifts in provincial leaders that followed the quake but that may have been scheduled to some extent before the natural disaster.
The Beijing authorities sent their own committee of experts to Sichuan Province after the earthquake to assess construction practices there.
The chairman of the committee, Ma Zongjin, said at a news conference in Beijing last September that because of a rush to build schools during China’s economic boom in recent years, more than 1,000 damaged schools had suffered from at least one of two shortcomings: they were built extremely close to the fault line and were destroyed with other structures near them, or they were poorly built.
But detailed results of that investigation have not been released.
Tags:children, collapse, Compensation, construction standards, corruption, death toll, Ma Zongjin, National People's Congress, school, structure, Vice governor of Sichuan, Wei Hong
Posted in Compensation, Construction and infrastructure, Disaster / risk management, Education, Facilities reconstruction, Government, Home rebuilding, Local government, National government, Seismic activity | No Comments »
Monday, March 9th, 2009
Student toll still under calculation ten months after earthquake
2009-03-08 10:28:12

Wei Hong, deputy governor of Sichuan, speaks at a press conference March 8, 2009. (www.china.org.cn)
Special Report: Reconstruction After Earthquake
BEIJING, March 8 (Xinhua) – The number of students killed in the devastating May 12 earthquake in southwestern China last year is still under calculation, an official said.
“We will publicize the result after we finish the calculation,”said Wei Hong, deputy governor of Sichuan, who is attending the annual session of the Chinese legislature.
The student toll is a question relating to the number of people killed in the quake, Wei said, adding that the calculation must be carried out according to relevant regulations enacted by relevant ministries and government departments.
“Therefore it is a very complicated process. We are still investigating into and checking the number of the dead and missing. It is not easy for us to tell how many students were exactly killed in the earthquake before the accurate number of al lthe victims is confirmed,” he said at a press conference.
Earlier reports said that thousands of students had been killed in the magnitude 8.0 quake and officials were believed to bear some responsibility in relation to shoddy construction of school buildings.
After the earthquake, the government had pledged greater efforts to investigate why many schools crumbled while nearby buildings stayed erect.
It is estimated that about 87,000 people died in the earthquake.
Wei said that the province will have restored 95 percent of the collapsed school buildings by the end of 2009. Half of the campuses are now under construction in the 39 most severely-hit counties.
The province has stepped up the re-building of residential houses for farmers and citizens. “We will ensure everybody to move into new houses by the end of this year,” he said.
He added that there have been no outbursts of epidemics nor famine in the quake region. “As no social unrest was reported, we did not take any special security measures,” he said
Tags:casualty, death, farmers, residential, toll, victim
Posted in Construction and infrastructure, Education, Facilities reconstruction, Government, Home rebuilding, Local government, National government, Official news source | No Comments »
Monday, March 9th, 2009
Macao SAR to finance 10 reconstruction projects
2009-03-03 来源:新华网
On Tuesday 3rd March 2009, Macao Special Administrative Region (SAR) signed an agreement with China’s quake-hit Sichuan province, which will see the SAR finance 10 reconstruction projects in Guangyuan city, Sichuan, according to a press release from the SAR government.
The 10 projects include the rebuilding of roads, bridges, river embankment, and sewage treatment works in Guangyuan city, for which the SAR government will allocate 687 million yuan (102 million U.S. dollars), according to the press release.
The agreement was signed in Sichuan’s capital Chengdu by Chui Sai On, the Macao SAR’s Secretary for Social Affairs and Culture, and representatives of the Sichuan Provincial Government.
The 8.0-magnitude quake centered in Sichuan’s Wenchuan County, which took place on May 12 last year, left more than 69,000 people dead, 374,000 injured, 18,000 missing and millions homeless, according to official statistics.
The government of the Macao SAR has already signed a general agreement with the Sichuan provincial government, under which the SAR will finance the reconstruction projects in the quake-stricken province located in south western China. According to the agreement, Macao SAR will spend an amount of 5.5 billion patacas (688 million U.S. dollars) funding the rebuilding projects in some counties of Sichuan.
The Macao SAR government initiated the financing of seven reconstruction projects in Guanyuan last year, and, with the agreement to finance the above 10 projects signed, a total of 17 Macao-financed rebuilding projects in Guangyuan have been launched so far, according to the press release.
After completing the financial arrangements of the 17 projects, the SAR government said it would continue to assess another 19 rebuilding projects mainly of education and sports facilities.
Tags:bridge, finance, Guangyuan, Macao, river embankment, road, sewage, Sichuan Provincial Government, Xinhua
Posted in Construction and infrastructure, Facilities reconstruction, Government, Hygiene, Infrastructure, Investment, Local government, National government, Official news source, Transport | No Comments »
Monday, March 9th, 2009
四川灾区医疗重建资金缺口63亿 工程进度缓慢
来源:四川在线
According to a teleconference of Sichuan medical-sanitation institute on 3rd March 2009, there was a 6.3 billion RMB shortfall in funds for the reconstruction of medical and sanitation facilities. By 27th Feb, only 522 projects had been completed, which accounted for 12.65% of the initial plan. According to Chen Wenhua, vice-governor of Sichuan government, progress in the reconstruction of medical-sanitation facilities has been relatively slow, compared to other public facilities.
“With the current progress, it is rather difficult to complete all these reconstruction projects in only 10 months, and it will get harder and harder,” said Chen. By 27th February 2009, in the 1252 projects that had already received capital from central or provincial government, only 425 of them were under construction or already finished. 10 counties that were identified as “tremendously affected counties” had no projects ongoing.
So how did the lag happen when sufficient subsidies had already arrived? Chen Wenhua had concluded:
Firstly, some local government have not attached sufficient priorty to medical-sanitation projects. Responsibilities were not well defined. Secondly, other public facility projects were given priority in some counties. Last but not least, the imbalance of capital distributed between different counties has substantially hampered progress on reconstruction, which means the general “sufficient subsidies” was actually not enough for certain projects.
To further explain the last point, Chen emphasized that the lack of progress/funds was partially the result of the high construction standards that some local government prescribed, which were not accounted for when budgets were issued centrally.
Chen pointed out that it is vital to define the responsibilities of each level and department of the government in the face of all the demanding work and the tight schedule – all reconstruction work of medical-sanitation institutions must be in progress by the end of March 2009; reinforcement needs to be completed before July; and by the end of 2009, all the newly built town and township clinics must be in operation.
今(3)日,记者从四川省地震灾区医疗卫生机构恢复重建电视电话会议上获悉,全省医疗卫生机构恢复重建资金总缺口约63亿元,截至2月27日,全省在建及竣工项目522个,占规划的12.65%,与其他公共设施恢复重建进度相比,副省长陈文华称:“全省医疗卫生机构的恢复重建工程进度相对缓慢。”
“如果依照目前进度,要在仅有的10个月时间内,基本完成重建,任务十分繁重,难度越来越大”,陈文华说,截止2月27日,在国定和省定重灾县,已经落实资金的1252个项目中,在建和竣工项目仅有425个,有10个县没有开工项目。
资金已经到位,工程为何滞后?陈文华总结了3个原因:一是部分地方政府重视不够,主体责任不到位,“等、靠、要”的思想依然存在。二是一些地方未按要求优先重建医疗卫生机构,国定重灾县间存在明显的资金不均衡现象,资金不足及资金落实不平衡的问题,已经严重影响恢复重建进度。三是部分项目建设标准有所突破,超出了国家的前期批复内容。
陈文华说:“在目前任务重、时间紧的情况下,有必要再次明确各级各部门应承担的职责。”
3月底前市级、县级医疗卫生机构要开工,年底前基本完成主体工程建设;6月底以前,医疗卫生机构维修加固工作要全部完工;年底前,乡镇卫生院建设项目要全部完工并投入使用。
Tags:funding, shortfall, Sichuan Medical Sanitation Institute
Posted in Construction and infrastructure, Enterprise, Facilities reconstruction, Health care, Infrastructure, Local government, National government, Official news source | No Comments »
Tuesday, March 3rd, 2009
Quake-hit Chinese hope for better life
2009-02-27 21:47:18
Special Report: Reconstruction After Earthquake
CHENGDU, Feb. 27 (Xinhua) — Liu Renqin in his sixties has reopened his decade-old gravy store, with the savory smell often attracting queues of buyers from his temporary-house community.
In his view, the store is less of business purpose, but more a link to the calm and happy life before last May’s devastating earthquake that left more than 80,000 people dead or missing.
The original store, which Liu had run for more than ten years in Beichuan, one of the hardest-hit counties, was toppled, and half of his families, including a son, a daughter-in-law and a granddaughter, died in the catastrophe.
Though turning more silent, Liu has gradually been adapted to the life in the new community, the largest prefab neighborhood in Mianyang City, Sichuan Province. The neighborhood is home to more than 10,000 fellow residents from Beichuan.
“We have to live on,” says Liu. He even plans a tour to Beijing within a couple of years if the gravy store can help him save enough money, since he has dreamed of visiting the national capital.
Wen Huarong, 40, who lost both her son and mother in the quake, now works as a volunteer in the community and devotes most of her energy taking care of the preschool children in the neighbourhood.
“It touches me with a sense of family,” Wen says. “People who are still alive need some sort of dedication to life and work to make them more courageous.”
But some are still struggling for the future.
Liu Daihe, 43, finds it difficult to find a stable job after the phosphorous mine at Qingping Town of Mianzhu, another hard-damaged city, was gulped by the quake. He had worked for the mine for years and was the breadwinner of his family.
He looked for jobs elsewhere, but was turned down for his age. “I’m not competitive on the market. In addition, I don’t have technical skills. I can only do hard labor in the pit.”
Liu had to travel hundreds of miles to Yibin in southern Sichuan to work at a private mine, where he was paid 80 yuan (11.8 U.S. dollars) a day working from 4 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Before the Spring Festival, Liu came back and placed himself at a small mine in the adjacent city of Shifang, which was set up by one of his fellow villagers. The pay is 50 yuan on a daily basis.
Facing the tough situation, local governments have listed employment as the top priority, hosting a series of job fairs and offering training programs to help job seekers improve their technical skills.
By the end of last year, more than 1.2 million laborers in quake-hit areas got re-employed. In Mianzhu alone, the local labor bureau reached out to offer more than 18,000 public-welfare posts with modest earnings, such as guarding warehouses or sweeping streets.
Jiangsu, which is responsible for the direct assistance to Mianzhu, offered 50,000 jobs at five large-scale job fairs.
If jobs are regarded as the top priority, the second comes housing. Ma Qianguo, chief of the Communist Party committee of Luobozhai village in Beichuan, is so busy with house rebuilding that he has slept for only three to four hours a day for months.
He hopes that all the villagers can move into new houses before May 12. That will be the best way to commemorate the dead at the quake’s first anniversary, he says.
“The foundations of the new houses are as solid as bridge piers,” Ma says. “They can to stand against even a magnitude-10 quake.”
“While building our new village, we are also establishing our new life goals,” he says.
In Longxi village, Wenchuan County, the quake epicenter, 37-year-old Chen Shixue keeps his temporary house warm through the winter with an electric heater.
Chen said the government has offered construction materials and each family 2,000 yuan (290 U.S. dollars) to help build the wind and rain-proof houses made of plastic cloth and wood boards.
Among the 96 families in the village, 90 lost their homes in the quake. They built temporary houses to live through the winter as their new permanent houses have not been completed.
As it’s getting warmer, they have packed away the quilts and the electric carpet given by the local government, says Chen.
By the end of January, 560,000 rural households in Sichuan, almost half of the total number, had completed building their new permanent houses.
“Spring is coming. There are always new hopes,” Chen says
Tags:Beichuan, Longxi, Luobozhai, Mianyang, Mianzhu, mine, Qingping, Shifang
Posted in Construction and infrastructure, Governance and social policy, Home rebuilding, Living conditions, Local government, Official news source | No Comments »
Friday, February 27th, 2009
成都抗震救灾中查处违纪案22起 处理干部36名
2009年02月24日 来源:四川在线-华西都市报
http://news.sohu.com/20090224/n262424796.shtml
In the conference of Chengdu Committee of Disciplinary Investigation yesterday, it is revealed that the committee had punished 22 officials and 36 party members in 2008 for their dereliction of duty, corruption or other undisciplined behaviour that had presented in post quake relief work.
昨日,记者从中共成都市第十一届纪律检查委员会第三次全体会议上获悉,2008年成都市查处抗震救灾中玩忽职守、失职渎职、贪污私分救灾物资等违纪案件22起,处理党员干部36名。
Tags:Chengdu Committee of Disciplinary Investigation, corruption, officials, party members
Posted in Government, Legal, Local government, Official news source | No Comments »
Friday, February 27th, 2009
联丰村“太平”文化中心动工 川保险业关注重建
2009-02-24 来源: 四川新闻网
On 20th Feb, Taiping Community Centre in Lianfeng Village, Anxian, Mianyang City, which received 1.23 million RMB from Taiping Life Insurance Co., started constructing.
According to Du Shaoyou, the village head, the original community Center that had served 1143 ‘Left-behinds’ (children, women, and elderly whose relatives are away working, leaving them behind in their home village/town) from Lianfeng and other five neighbouring villages was destroyed in the quake.
The centre that is expected to be completed in June this year will be mainly used for Children and Elderly people and also a training centre for female villagers.
2月20日,在地震中遭受重创的绵阳安县联丰村太平文化活动中心正式破土动工,该中心由太平人寿保险有限公司捐款123万元与联丰村共同兴建。中心建成后将成为联丰村及附近5个丘区村留守儿童学习知识、留守妇女学习技术、空巢老人颐养天年的场所。
据联丰村村支书杜少友介绍,联丰村及附近的5个丘区村共有留守儿童643人、留守妇女400多人、空巢老人100余人。“5•12”地震使安县联丰村“留守儿童关爱中心”400多平米的公共设施和辅助设施毁于一旦。
预计该中心将于2009年6月前落成。
Tags:'left-behinds', An'xian, Du Shaoyou, Lianfeng, Mianyang, Taiping Community Centre, Taiping Life Insurance Co.
Posted in Childcare, Civil society, Construction and infrastructure, Facilities reconstruction, Local government, Official news source, Social welfare | No Comments »
Friday, February 27th, 2009
都江堰城镇受灾群众 可领重建补助金了
2009-02-25来源: 四川新闻网
On 24th Feb, Dujiangyan government published the announcement on distributing allowance for residential housing reconstruction and reinforcement. However the procedure is loaded with red tape.
Inline with the announcement, the allowance for those whose housing completely went down will be directly transferred to residents’ Special Personal Account. But application and a letter of commitment need to be signed before Dujiangyan Finance Bureau confirm personal information and get it registered and then, open the account.
The allowance ranges from 5 thousand to 35 thousand depending on the standard of the family income (Low-income: 29-35 thousand; Medium-income: 23-29 thousand; High-income:5-10 thousand.)
Those who need the allowance for repair or reinforcement have to complete a series of paperwork: register in relevant government department before starting the repair or reinforcement work, finish the work, file it on a record – then the City Finance Bureau allots the money to the governments of towns and townships, from where the residents receive the cash (Slight damage: 3000; Medium damage: 5000; Serious damage: 8000).
“It is important to be certain that people are using these funds for housing.” explained the relevant official.
With immediate effect, eligible residents in Dujiangyan can receive their allowance transferred or by cash. The cut-off time of this is by 30th July this year. Public Supervision Hotline: 8713 1993.
昨日,都江堰市政府正式发布了关于5·12汶川地震城镇居民住房恢复重建补助资金发放的公告。即日起,凡符合发放条件的都江堰城镇受灾居民均可领取毁损住房补助金、受损住房维修加固补助金和自行过渡安置补助金。
根据公告,住房毁损户要领取补助金,须完成受理登记,选择确定重建意愿并签署“承诺书”。满足上述条件的,由都江堰市财政局根据受理登记确认情况,在银行为其建立“个人专户”,将毁损住房补助金直接打到“个人专户”上
城镇住房毁损户毁损住房补助金金额以家庭收入和家庭人口为依据,最低收入家庭最低可获补助2.9万元,最高3.5万元;低收入家庭最低可获补助2.6万元,最高3.2万元;一般收入家庭,最低可获补助2.3万元,最高2.9万元;高收入家庭,最低可获补助0.5万元,最高1万元。
住房受损户要领取修复加固补助资金的,须完成受理登记、修复加固且办了竣工备案手续后,由市财政局按实将受损住房修复加固补助资金划拨到乡镇,乡镇按实按栋,在对住房维修加固完成后,再发以现金的形式发放给修复加固住房的组织者或施工单位。
都江堰市城镇受损住房修复加固补助标准全部按成都市相关标准的上限执行,住房轻微受损户可获得补助3000元,中等破坏住户可获得补助5000元,严重破坏住户可获得8000元补助。
据悉,凡符合条件的城镇受灾群众从即日起即可予以发放,发放截止时间为2009年7月30日。监督举报电话:87131993。
Tags:allowance for residential housing, Dujiangyan, Dujiangyan Finance Bureau, procedure, reconstruction, reinforcement, Special Personal Account
Posted in Construction and infrastructure, Government, Home rebuilding, Living conditions, Local government, Official news source | No Comments »
Friday, February 27th, 2009
参与灾后重建的建筑农民工 也可领培训券了
25. 来源:成都商报-四川新闻网
In a recent meeting Chengdu Employment Bureau announced that migrant workers who had engaged in reconstructive business had become part of the population who was entitled to apply the Employment Training Voucher. According to the chief of the bureau, Wang Weihua, the ticket one can apply before the deadline 30th April values 500 Yuan and can be used any time before 31st Dec, 2009.
221 training agencies in Chengdu were assigned to cooperate with this training program. Courses provide include housekeeping, computer technology, cook, electrician and so forth. “Most people would find something fits their need.”
成都市就业局召开新闻通气会公布就业培训券发放范围扩大至参加灾后重建的建筑农民工。
市就业局副局长王卫华介绍,申请时间至2009年4月30日,培训券的额度每人500元,2009年12月31日前有效。在有效期内,劳动者可持券选择全市221家定点培训机构的任何一家接受培训,培训项目涉及家政、计算机、厨师、电工等,“绝大多数人都可选到比较适合的专业”。
Tags:Chengdu Employment Bureau, Employment Training Voucher, training, Wang Weihua
Posted in Construction and infrastructure, Employment, Government, Labour and migration, Local government, Official news source | No Comments »
Friday, February 27th, 2009
中央级救灾物资储备库年底建成
20. 来源:成都商报
According to the Sichuan Provincial Bureau of Civil Affairs, the draft of the feasibility study on Central-level Reserve Depot of Relief Supplies, which is planned to be installed in Shuangliu Logistics Park, was finished a few days ago. The 150-mu-occupying reserve depot is expected to go into service by the end of the year.
记者昨日从四川省民政厅获悉,成都中央级救灾物资储备库工程项目可研报告初稿已于日前完成。储备库初步规划占地150亩,选址在双流空港物流园区。今年内将全面完成建设任务。
Tags:depot, Relief supplies, ShuangLiu Airport, Sichuan Provincial Bureau of Civil Affairs
Posted in Construction and infrastructure, Infrastructure, Local government, Official news source, Relief, Transport | No Comments »
Friday, February 27th, 2009
唐家山堰塞湖水位高 将清淤和开挖泄流槽
2009-02-19 来源:四川在线-华西都市报
According to a source at the Mianyang City government, silt drainage of the Tangjiashan quake-lake is about to start, which is planned to be implemented in two phases, with an investment of a total of 160 million rmb.
The water level of Tangjiashan Quake Lake has now stabilised at 718 metres, which is lower than it was shortly after the September 24th flood. However the Chengdu Investigation and Design Research Institute of China Hydropower Advisory Group, on the basis of various measurements and tests, urges caution: the lake still post threats to people downstream. Experts underlined that constant heavy rain and aftershock worryingly increased the possibility of mudslide that would cause massive siltation and consequent flooding.
As yet, there is no easy access to this area, and the restoration program recommended in the current feasibility report would be very challenging. In essence, the plan is to excavate deep division channels, leaving 70-80 metre side slopes on 2 banks that consist of silted rock fragments, presenting considerable risk.
In line with the set plan, drainage and clear-up needs to be completed before the flooding season this year, which is a major part of the first phase of the entire project. Deformation inspection, facility installation and construction of levees are required to be finished by the end of 2009.
The estimated total investment of the whole project is approximately 160.41 million, specifically, 52.75 for the first stage and 107.66 for the second.
唐家山堰塞湖目前水位仍高居718米。
“9·24”洪灾后,中国水电顾问集团成都勘测设计研究院受委托,对唐家山堰塞湖一带进行了大量野外勘探、测量、试验等工作,形成结论:唐家山堰塞体整体稳定,但在持续强降雨或强余震等不利工况作用下,两岸边坡特别是堰塞体右岸一些冲沟存在滑坡、崩塌、泥石流等易发山地灾害,若泥石流造成泄流槽较大规模淤堵,有可能产生次生灾害,对下游防洪安全造成严重威胁,并也可能对上游治城灾后重建防洪保安带来影响。
在进场道路未通的情况下,目前制定的“可研报告”推荐的整治方案不确定性因素较多,工程量大,实施难度很高。“可研报告”中按照治城二十年一遇防洪要求,推荐对泄流槽进行大开挖,估计两岸开挖边坡将高达70—80米,且为夹泥碎裂岩,存在安全隐患。
按计划,第一期整治项目包括泄流槽淤塞体的清淤、堰塞体左右山体变形观测和禹里乡治城防洪堤护岸工程。其中,泄流清淤要求在今年主汛期前完成,变形观测设施安装和防洪堤修建要求在2009年底前完成。
整治工程投资估算16041万元,其中:第一期工程投资5275万元,第二期工程投资10766万元。
Tags:aftershock, China Hydropower Advisory Group, drain, excavation, flood, Mianyang, quake lake, restoration program, silt, Tianjiashan
Posted in Construction and infrastructure, Facilities reconstruction, Infrastructure, Investment, Local government, Official news source | No Comments »