Archive for the ‘Governance and social policy’ Category

Summary of Interview Research Two Years After the 12 May 2008 Sichuan Earthquake

Saturday, May 8th, 2010

Work to rebuild the counties destroyed by the Sichuan earthquake is well under way, but a huge amount still needs to be done, and the grim reality for tens of thousands of the victims is that they will still be living in temporary shelters beyond the third anniversary.

Hundreds of interviews conducted recently by Sichuan Quake Relief across a wide range of affected areas with victims of the quake indicate that, while there is a high level of satisfaction with the reaction of the central authorities since the earthquake, at a local level many fundamental problems persist.

A prevalent theme of the SQR findings was the somewhat inconsistent nature of the recovery efforts. Some villages were just about complete, looking extremely well organised, with housing, retail and commercial complexes taking shape and a lot of new infrastructure in place. In these, the locals and officials could rightly say, “mission just about accomplished.” But then it could happen that the next village down the road would look in comparative disarray, with rubble-strewn streets, infrastructure projects in the early stages, temporary dwellings and roads in poor condition and not protected from landslide threats, and permanent housing still a distant dream for most.

Various factors may account for these differences, among them local governance issues, geological factors, local economic conditions, the relative successes or weaknesses of the ‘twinning system’ etc., but for those who live there, for now, it’s “mission far from accomplished”.

Housing is still the key issue that is causing great concern all across the region. The rebuilding work of this vast reconstruction plan that involves more than 1,200 townships and in excess of 20 million people is now officially scheduled to be completed ahead of time on September 10, 2010, but many see this four-month time span as an unrealistic target given that in some towns construction has not begun, and in other cases the land for projects has not yet been officially assigned.

Work on the reconstruction of the 1.4 million rural homes in the area is often slow, and in many cases stagnated, as villagers cannot afford to make up the difference of the average 20,000 RMB subsidy they received with the 70,000 RMB it costs to build an average small home. Many families are consequently still living in homes that are unsafe and marked for demolition, or in unfinished housing open to the elements.

Adding to tensions is the convoluted and somewhat opaque subsidy system which can vary greatly depending on hukou status and other factors open to official interpretation. Towns and villages are rife with stories of favoured individuals getting more than they should have, and of others not getting what they deserved.

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Another related issue that is causing much concern is the matter of farmers being asked to give up their land and move into urban communities to make way for infrastructure development projects. Aside from the post-quake recovery effort in Sichuan, this is part of a wider national urban-rural integration involving the rationalisation of land use by concentrating rural residents and industries in designated settlements. In 2009, according to the Ministry of Land and Resources, nationwide land sale revenues reached 1.59 trillion RMB (US$233 billion), up 63.4 per cent on the previous year. With such profits at stake, many farmers feel that local officials and developers are using the earthquake reconstruction efforts as a pretext to increase their holdings. Amid somewhat frantic and chaotic rebuilding and re-zoning, some allege they were asked to patriotically give up their land for community infrastructure projects, only to then witness it being sold to private business for a handsome profit.

These allegations of unfair compensation payments and land re-zoning projects pop up time and again throughout the region, causing a lot of anxiety exacerbated by what locals say is scarce opportunity to challenge decisions they find unfair. In interviews many said that their calls for meetings at a village or township level to discuss their concerns often went unanswered, and they are reluctant to bring their grievances to a regional or central level.

Regardless of whether the official decisions were fair or not, the fact there is little room for a challenge often leaves the individuals concerned feeling short-changed, and with little access to official sources of information, the community vacuums are often filled with rumour and speculation.

Good work has been done on the anti-corruption front from a central level, many said. Following a five-month audit, the National Audit Office said early this year that 230 million yuan of reconstruction funds had been misused, and Sichuan provincial sources reported that 350 officials were found violating laws or Party discipline during earthquake-relief or reconstruction in 2009. These are small percentages in the overall scheme of the mass recovery effort, and the fact they were publicly investigated last year and reported is laudable, but with community suspicions running deep it is important this work continues to be carried out under a spotlight and right down to the most local level.

Two years on, reconstruction progress

Education and healthcare standards were, most interviewees said, generally now back up to pre-quake standards. Some reported that poor economic circumstances had meant that a small minority of families could not afford required healthcare or education for their children, and in some circumstances grassroot organisations and non-governmental organisations were helping to fill this gap.

In many areas water supplies are under strain. Sources have sometimes been altered by geological shifts, or by new layouts of villages concentrating too many people on too few sources. Often people walk long distances to fetch fresh water.

The quality of the water, and the air, is also of major concern. The huge level of construction and cement production in the area has inevitably led to a significant deterioration in air and water quality. In addition, there were many concerns raised that with the focus fixed on construction, factories and officials are turning a blind eye to fundamental environmental safety issues. Many people expressed extreme concern for the health of their children as a result of environmental degradation. None of those interviewed had heard of any recent environmental impact assessments carried out in their communities. No doubt this type of work is being carried out, but again it seems information of this kind is not trickling down to the local communities.

To appease these and the other primary concerns mentioned here there were many calls at a grassroot level for a more obvious and accessible central government supervisory presence in the affected areas. And the government efforts at all levels should continue to be bolstered by the civil society initiatives, which were widely praised. Multiple grassroot organisations, as well as domestic and international non-governmental organisations, have been playing a solid role in the wider area of community recovery and development in the two years since the quake. Similarly, media outlets, both domestic and international, have been granted wide access to the affected areas and have proved invaluable in increasing the wider level of understanding of the regional issues. Their work should be applauded and encouraged, particularly now, two years after the event, when the focus might be inclined to shift elsewhere.

In Sichuan, much great work has been done over the past 24 months, and many people have been able to rebuild their lives in a comparatively short space of time. But the fact remains that with such a huge number of people affected, even if a small percentage fall through the support net, that number could amount to tens of thousands, if not hundreds of thousands of victims. Those that have the potential to fall through the net need to know they will not be forgotten two, three or more years after the disaster. They need all our support.

Report also available to download in PDF format.

Wenchuan earthquake survivors to move into new houses by 2009

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.

20090401: Xinhua: Beichuan opened for 4 days for Tomb Sweeping Day

Monday, April 6th, 2009

Quake-leveled China county opens to mourners
www.chinaview.cn 2009-04-01 20:34:20

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2009-04/01/content_11115060.htm

Special Report: Reconstruction After Earthquake
BEICHUAN, Sichuan, April 1 (Xinhua) — The barbed wire around Beichuan’s old county seat was gone.
The county that perished in last year’s devastating earthquake reopened Wednesday morning to former residents who wished to mourn the dead ahead of the annual tomb sweeping day that falls on Saturday.
Beichuan County, which has been closed since May 20 last year, will be open for four days until Saturday.
The mourning crowd began pouring into the dead county at 7 a.m. Policemen checked everyone’s ID to make sure only natives of Beichuan were allowed into the county.
Most mourners brought incense, candles and bouquet to the ruins of former schools, homes and offices, shed tears, and spent a few hours with the deceased.
Thousands of white paper flowers and heart-shaped cards were tied to the fence encircling the collapsed building of Beichuan High School in memory of the students and teachers killed in the quake.
“I burnt some paper money for my wife last week, from atop a hill that overlooks the old county seat,” said Qiao Hong, 34. “It was her birthday.”
Almost 11 months after the disaster, Qiao was still hesitant to go back to his old place, fearing memories of his past would haunt him.
“I feel my son is still there, waiting for me to take him home from kindergarten.”
The mother and son were among at least 4,700 people listed as “missing” under the rubble of Beichuan. Plus the 15,600 confirmed deaths, the county lost two-thirds of its population in the quake.
Wednesday’s reopening of the ghost town was a real challenge for the local government. Sanitation workers had to sterilize the ruins that used to be homes, schools, teahouses and workshops; health workers and ambulances stood by, ready to provide first-aid to the grieving mourners.
The county government had to clean the streets leading to the old county seat of vendors, mostly quake survivors who eked out living selling postcards of the quake site, incense and “paper money” for the dead.
The government also arranged 10 buses that offered free rides for the mourners to travel from their new homes in the nearby city of Mianyang.
About one kilometer from his son’s kindergarten was Qiao Hong’s home, a green apartment building that used to house dozens of workers from the county’s telecom company. The building remained intact but entry was forbidden for safety considerations.
Qiao looked around and saw no policemen on patrol.
“I want to get home for a quick look,” he told reporters who followed him into the building.
A deserted PC blocked the way on the second floor. Qiao recognized it was his own. “Someone stole it,” he said.
The door to his third-floor apartment was open and the place was half empty. Before the county was closed, Qiao and his neighbors were given a few days to take away their belongings.
He didn’t take his wedding photo. So the couple remained smiling on their bedroom wall, with Qiao in a suit and tie and his wife, Mu Chunyan, in a white wedding gown.
The bedroom floor was piled with love letters he wrote to his wife nearly 20 years ago.
“We were classmates at high school,” he said, ignoring reporters’ question why he hadn’t taken the letters to his new home.
Qiao avoided entering his son’s bedroom, fearing he might collapse at the sight of the picture books and toys on the floor.
He spent 30 minutes searching through a pile of books on the balcony, before he took out two: one on gardening and the other on computer engineering.
Accidentally, he found a few pictures of his wife and son, which he carefully put away.
Qiao said he would come back home Saturday, the official tomb sweeping day.
“Any plans for the future? I don’t know for sure. Maybe I’ll marry again, sometime next year, have a child and try to live the way I used to live.”
Qiao has a girlfriend, who has been cooking and doing most household chores for him for six months.
“But it is not ripe yet.”

20090403: Xinhua: China’s quake-hit Sichuan aims to finish most rebuilding by 2010

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)

20090302: Xinhua: China political advisors propose quake relief day to remember May 12 quake

Monday, March 9th, 2009

China political advisors propose quake relief day to remember May 12 quake

China’s political advisors have proposed to establish a national quake relief day to be remembered on May 12th every year to commemorate last year’s devastating earthquake in the country’s southwestern regions.
The setting of the special day would help the public “be alert to danger in times of peace”, said a proposal put forward by the Central Committee of the Chinese Peasants and Workers Democratic Party (CPWDP), one of China’s eight non-Communist parties.
The proposal has been submitted to the forthcoming annual session of the 11th National Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC), scheduled to open here on Tuesday.
China is a country with frequent natural disasters including earthquakes, it said.
It suggested people to hold various activities to mourn the quake victims at 2:28 p.m. on May 12 every year, the moment when amagnitude-8.0 earthquake hit Wenchuan County in the southwestern Sichuan Province.
The quake, the most destructive natural disaster to hit China for decades, left more than 87,000 people dead or missing, millions homeless, and a huge loss of more than 845 billion yuan (about 124 billion U.S. dollars).
Venues with a high population densities, including schools, government buildings, shopping centres, and office buildings should also hold emergency evacuation drills in the context of earthquakes and other emergencies, the proposal said.

One week after the quake, China observed a nationwide three-minute silent tribute to the quake dead, the first of its kind for ordinary citizens. Such a privilege used to be reserved for state leaders.
The tribute was the highlight of a three-day official National Mourning Period, which also featured suspension of all entertainment activities, and with flags flown at half mast.
In terms of the intensity and scope of destruction, the May 12th quake is believed to have surpassed the 7.8-magnitude quake in 1976 in Tangshan city, northern Hebei Province, which claimed more than 240,000 lives.

20090227: Xinhua: Quake-hit Chinese hope for better life

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

20090222: Preferential policy for college graduates from quake-hit regions

Friday, February 27th, 2009

2009-02-22  来源:成都日报

Central Department of Education has released a series of preferential policy for this year’s college graduates. And students from quake-hit regions will also receive additional allowance (if needed) from colleges they study in when applying jobs such as travel expenses and commumication costs.

应届毕业生记者昨日获悉,为了促进大学毕业生就业工作,教育部等近期出台了一系列优惠政策,以进一步推动大学毕业生就业工作。据悉,汶川大地震灾区生源毕业生今年求职,若家庭经济困难,还可获得高校给予的路费、通讯费等求职补贴。

北京援建什邡:毕业生可优先办进京就业手续

来源:四川在线/北京晚报

In line with a support program revealed by Beijing City government, job applications of Shifang students who have been studying in Beijing and intend to stay and work are privileged to be processed first. Moreover, a minimum yearly supply of employment position is promised to job applicants from Shifang.

北京市政府公布“北京市对口支援什邡市灾后恢复重建智力援助方案”,在京就读的什邡灾区生源毕业生意愿在京就业,可优先办理进京就业手续。此外,今后每年将至少有1000名什邡灾区劳动力在京实现就业。

Educational training, psychological counseling, technology support and constructional assistance are also planned to be provided to related realms in the next 3 years.

根据灾区恢复重建对重建规划、建设施工、教育、卫生、科技、旅游、交通、农业等领域的重点需求,北京市将采取专家服务团、留学人才服务团或选派高层次人才等形式为灾区提供咨询指导、技术援助、人才培养等智力服务。三年合计派服务团4至5批,每批10至15人。

同时,每年组织由30人组成的北京知名教育专家和优秀教师支教团赴什邡开展为期一个月的支教活动,就地培训什邡市小学、初中、高中校长、管理人员和各学科教师,计划3年培训各类管理人员和教师3000人次。

20090107: Xinhua: Hope Project to invest 400mln Yuan in Sichuan quake zones

Friday, February 27th, 2009

Hope Project to invest 400mln Yuan in Sichuan quake zones

Xinhua 2009-01-07 18:43:25

More than 410 million Yuan (about 60 million U.S. dollars) will be invested by the Hope Project in quake zones in southwest China’s Sichuan Province, according to the China Youth Development Foundation (CYDF).
Some 254 primary schools in 33 counties will be built with the money, said Tu Meng, deputy general secretary of CYDF. A construction timeline had not been decided yet, Tu said.
The foundation will also provide computer rooms, libraries, movies, sports grounds, teacher training and scholarships.
The money will be used in eight quake affected areas in Sichuan, including Chengdu, Mianyang, Deyang and Aba Autonomous Prefecture of Tibetan and Qiang nationalities.
Donations helped raise the 410 million Yuan, said Tu.
Hope Project, started in 1989, is a Chinese public service project organized by CYDF and the Communist Youth League (CYL). Its goal is to help children in poverty-stricken areas to go to school.

20090113: Xinhuanet: China plans 9 billion Yuan aid for the impoverished

Thursday, February 26th, 2009

China plans 9 billion Yuan aid for the impoverished

2009-01-13 16:18:25

China announced on Tuesday an aid package totaling 9 billion Yuan (1.32 billion U.S. dollars) for the country’s needy people two weeks ahead of its traditional Lunar New Year.
About 74 million Chinese receiving the minimum living allowances or the “five guarantees” (namely food, clothing, medical care, housing and burial expenses provided by local governments to those without relatives or employment), would receive a one-off payment of 100 Yuan if they live in the countryside and 150 Yuan if they live in the cities.
The rural allowance was less than that in urban areas because living costs there were lower.
The payment would be made from the central budget before the Chinese Lunar New Year, one of the most important occasions for family reunion in the country. This year’s Lunar New Year falls on Jan. 26.
By Tuesday, the southwestern province of Sichuan, jolted by the magnitude-8 earthquake in May, allocated 394 million Yuan for clothing and shelter to help the quake-affected people get through the harsh winter. This relief comes in addition to the nationwide aid package.
Chengdu, provincial capital of Sichuan, even handed out 100-yuan-worth shopping coupons to the needy citizens.
The neighboring province of Shaanxi, also jolted during the May earthquake, donated about 850,000 quilts and 110,000 pieces of clothing to its quake-affected people.
The province also granted rural and urban citizens living on the minimum living allowances an extra payment of their monthly minimum living allowances. Funds to cover heating expenses were also given out to those who lived on the minimum living allowances.
“The Chinese government attaches great concern to the livelihood of the disadvantaged population, especially in times of a global financial crisis,” Jiang Li, Vice Minister of the Civil Affairs said.
Local authorities must make sure all needy citizens qualifying for the aid package receive the payment in time, “so that they could enjoy a happy Lunar New Year,” he said.
The average annual net income for rural workers in China is 4,140 Yuan in 2007, against 24,932 Yuan in cities.
At present, about 62 million Chinese receive monthly minimum living allowances from the local governments, while 5.3 million people receive the “five guarantees.”
The average monthly allowance in 2007 was 182.4 Yuan in urban districts per person and 70 Yuan in rural areas. China had increased the monthly minimum living allowance by 15 Yuan in urban districts per person and by 10 Yuan for rural residents at the beginning of 2008.

20081225China says May 12 quake damages 14,000 schools in Sichuan

Monday, January 19th, 2009

2008年12月25日20:21 新华网

http://news.sohu.com/20081225/n261426445.shtml

BEIJING, Dec. 25 (Xinhua) — The deadly 8.0-magnitude earthquake that jolted southwestern China’s Sichuan province in May damaged close to 14,000 schools in 159 counties in the province, a senior official said on Thursday.

Lu Yongxiang, vice chairman of the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress (NPC), China’s top legislature, revealed the numbers during a briefing to the law-making body on the enforcement of the Law on Compulsory Education.

The 8.0-magnitude quake centered in Sichuan’s Wenchuan County left more than 69,000 people dead, 374,000 injured, 18,000 missing and millions homeless.

He did not disclose the casualties of students in the earthquake.

Many of the school buildings in the quake-affected areas needed to be rebuilt, Lu said, adding that many schools in the central and the western part of the country were still in poor condition.

He noted that after the earthquake, many school buildings in neighboring Gansu province were severely damaged, but their rebuilding were not covered in the government’s post-quake rebuilding budget.

According to Lu, 2.5 percent of China’s primary and middle school buildings were in poor conditions in 2007. More than 90 percent of those “risky” school buildings were located in the country’s rural areas.

Twenty percent of the primary school buildings and 11 percent of the middle school buildings were “risky” in southwestern Yunnan province as in 2007, he said, citing figures from the Ministry of Education.

Fire risks, traffic safety and hygiene also posed threats to many primary and middle schools in the country due to lack of safety education, Lu added.

Lu urged authorities to add reinforcement measures to all school buildings in the quake-hit areas and to conduct a comprehensive safety check on all primary and middle schools in the rural areas across the country.

Local governments should renovate all school buildings to meet anti-quake criteria “at a proper time”, Lu suggested.

He also urged for central and local governments to grant more funds to help middle and primary schools– especially those in the central and western rural areas — renovate their school buildings and raise safety education among students and teachers.

China had already stipulated in July this year that school facilities must observe higher quake-proof standards than common buildings in the same area.

新华网北京12月25日电 (记者周婷玉、陈菲)全国人大常委会副委员长路甬祥25日向全国人大常委会作义务教育法执法检查报告时说,这次汶川特大地震对灾区学校造成严重破坏,相当部分校舍需要重建。据四川省统计,共有159个县近1.4万所学校受灾,其中义务教育学校和完全中学占91%。

他还指出,目前中西部地区农村学校的危房比例仍然较高。据教育部反映,2007年,全国普通中小学危房面积占普通中小学校舍面积总数的2.48%,其中90%分布在中西部地区农村。云南省小学、初中危房比例最高,分别达到20%和11%。甘肃省甘南受灾地区学校校舍受损也很严重,其中不少校舍没有列入国家资助的灾区中小学校舍维修加固资金项目,而地方财政困难,难以进行修缮。另外,一些学校的安全教育还没有落实,在消防、交通、卫生等方面也存在着安全隐患。

路甬祥介绍,新义务教育法实施后,各级政府部门在严格学校选址规划、完善校舍设计和编制建设标准、提高校舍维修改造资金测算标准、严格学校安全监管、维护学校周边秩序等方面加强了工作。2008年7月实施的《建筑工程抗震设防分类标准》,提高了学校建筑的抗震设防标准,要求比当地一般建筑抗震设防烈度提高一度,这将对保障校舍安全具有促进作用。

为进一步加强学校安全建设,执法检查报告建议,加快全面排查农村中小学校舍安全情况的进度,当前特别要做好受汶川特大地震影响的地区校舍的维修加固工作。同时,各地政府对未达到抗震要求的所有校舍,应适时制定规划予以改造,使之逐步达到防震标准。

报告中还建议,应适当提高农村中小学校舍维修改造经费补助标准,中央财政应重点对中西部地区农村中小学校舍抗震加固工作加大支持力度;应当进一步健全学校安全管理制度,完善处置突发事件应急机制,定期开展安全教育和应急演练活动,不断提高广大师生的自我保护意识与防范危害的能力。