Posts Tagged ‘Shifang’

20090413: Xinhua: Employment, social support in the aftermath

Tuesday, April 14th, 2009

Feature: Restless recovery on post-quake Sichuan

www.chinaview.cn 2009-04-12 13:35:26

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2009-04/12/content_11172347.htm

By Gong Yidong, China Features

BEIJING, April 12 (Xinhua) — Liu Daihe, 43, lights a cigarette passed by his cousin Liu Daishu and spreads the mahjong tiles over the table. Puffing smoke into the 20-square-meter temporary house, he settles down to idle away another day with friends and relatives.

It is a typical snapshot on the 11,000-household interim community to the north of Mianzhu, one of the most damaged cities of the May 12 earthquake that left more than 80,000 Chinese dead or missing. Liu and the 40,000 inhabitants are enveloped in an atmosphere of both hope and ennui that contrasts with a clearly felt grief eight months ago.

Demands of life
Before the catastrophe, Liu was a phosphorous miner for many years at Qingping town of Mianzhu. But the mine, one of the local pillar industries, was swallowed by the quake along with Liu’s job.
As the breadwinner of the family, Liu looked for jobs elsewhere, but was turned down because of his age. “I’m not competitive on the market. More importantly, I don’t have technical skills, except from doing hard labor in the pit.”
The assistance is also dwindling. Last year, the government handed out 200 yuan per person a month for eight months and 33.5 kilograms of grain per head for three months, but all the financial and material support ended in January, says Liu. “Nowadays, around 15 percent of the people in the community live on what they had before,” his cousin says.
The price of commodities has climbed due to rising transport costs, and Liu and his wife, Chen Mingfang, have to rack their brains to make ends meet.
What worries the couple most is their 14-year-old son and 18-year-old daughter, who are studying at secondary school.
Changying, the daughter, will take the national college entrance examination this summer, meaning a lot of money will be needed if she is enrolled into university. This term alone, she paid 2,000-plus yuan for tuition fees and living expenses.
Her brother, Chenglin, pays 9 yuan a day for three meals in the school canteen as part of a boarder scheme.
Liu’s mother-in-law, who lives under the same roof, is covered by neither a pension nor the rural cooperative medical care. Liu is relieved that the past winter was mild compared with the previous year.

“Otherwise, she might have caught a severe cold,” he says.

In the end, Liu was forced to accept employment in a private mine hundreds of miles away in Yibin, southern Sichuan, where he was paid 80 yuan a day to work from 4 a.m. to 4 p.m..

The pay was satisfactory, but the toil and loneliness in a strange city were intolerable. The man of few words killed time by playing mahjong with his colleagues, and sometimes, small-time gambling.

Unlike many parts of Sichuan where the natural conditions are harsh, Mianzhu has fewer people moving to big cities like Beijing or Guangzhou for job opportunities.

“Before the quake, Mianzhu was blessed with favorable conditions, with no storms or landslides, and most of us preferred to stay in our hometown,” says Liu Daishu.

Adding to their sense of security was the multitude of industries sprawling across the city, such as the national key companies Dongfang Turbine, Lonmon Chemicals and Jiannanchun Distillery, which absorbed a large number of local workers.” We are used to the pace of ease here,” says Daishu.

Statistics from the Bureau of Labor Resources and Social Security of Mianzhu confirm that around 20,000 people are working outside Sichuan Province, accounting less than one tenth the total labor force.

Before the Spring Festival, Liu returned and worked at another small mine in the adjacent city of Shifang, which was set up by one of his fellow villagers.

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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

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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。

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20090111: Xinhua: Earthquake-destroyed school begins rebuilding with aid from Air Force

Friday, February 27th, 2009

Earthquake-destroyed school begins rebuilding with aid from Air Force
Xinhua 2009-01-11 21:46:35

A middle school damaged in the May 12 earthquake in Shifang City of Sichuan Province in southwest China began reconstruction on Sunday, with assistance from the Chinese Air Force.
Established in 1904, the Yinghua Town Middle School was leveled to ground in the deadly earthquake in Sichuan and some neighboring provinces, which left more than 80,000 deaths or missing.
The school is rebuilt on its original site in Yinghua Town, but will be given a new name of “Yinghua Bayi Middle School.” Aug. 1, or Bayi, is the founding day of the Chinese army.
Under the unified arrangement of the central authorities, the Air Force will help rebuild the whole school compound, which covers 17,764 square meters. Facilities include teaching buildings, a cultural hall, a dining hall, dormitories for teachers and students, a comprehensive gymnasium and a basketball playground.
The school was severely damaged in the earthquake, with all the teaching and office buildings collapsing and the students’ dormitory seriously cracking. The new buildings are designed to resist an earthquake measuring 8 on the Richter scale.
So far, the Air Force has helped build a “Blue Sky Elementary School” and a “Blue Sky Old People’s House” in the earthquake areas of Sichuan. It plans to build four more schools and one kindergarten in the quake-hit areas.

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SQR trip: March 4th 2009: Shifang (bringing clothes and blankets)

Thursday, February 26th, 2009

Title: SQR trip: March 4th 2009: Shifang (bringing clothes and blankets)
Location: Shifang
Description: March 4th Shifang (bringing clothes and blankets)
Date: 2009-03-04

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Beijing municipality to invest 7 billion yuan in Sichuan

Saturday, January 3rd, 2009

Beijing is expected to invest at least 7 billion yuan (1.02 billion U.S. dollars) in the quake-hit Sichuan Province in the coming two years, according to Mayor Guo Jinlong on October 8, Xinhua reported.

Beijing municipality has been tasked with Shifang. The money will be used on construction, intellectual support and industry cooperation. The focus this year is 39 programs, including construction of residential buildings, schools and hospitals, Guo said. In total, 86 energy-saving houses provided by Beijing had been delivered to Shifang Municipal Welfare Centre. In addition, the city had provided 11,696 jobs to Shifang City residents and received 1,579 students from one of the worst-hit areas in the May 12 quake. The conference proposed 685 post-quake programs with a total investment of 601.7 billion yuan. These included industries of hi-tech, resources, equipment manufacturing, agriculture, service trade, culture, tourism and infrastructure. Beijing and Sichuan companies signed 54 agreements here on Wednesday involving a total investment of 66.6 billion yuan.

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