China Daily

Offer of extra time off work sparks a travel rush

- By SHI XIAOFENG in Hangzhou shixf@chinadaily.com.cn

A seven-day paid holiday order from the Hangzhou municipal government last month brought a rush of overseas travel arrangemen­tsby local residents and increased competitio­n between travel agencies and domestic tourist attraction­s.

Hangzhou, the capital city of East China’s Zhejiang province, will host the G20 Leaders Summit early in September. The municipal government released a notice on its website on June 30 that civil servants not essential to summit preparatio­ns, along with the employees of State-owned enterprise­s based in nine main districts of the city, can take an extra seven days of paid holiday from Sept 1 to 7.

It also suggested private enterprise­s offer their employees a similar amount of time off during the summit.

“I would feel bad if I wasted this extra holiday time,” said Yang Tingxuan, a program manager at a magazine. Her boss decided to suspend the publicatio­n of two issues around the time of the summit.

Many people felt the same as Yang. Xiao Xue had visited the Entry-Exit Administra­tion of the Hangzhou Public Security Bureau several times for passport-related matters. When she went the day after the notice, she was shocked by the long, winding line of people.

Travel agencies reacted quickly. A leading online travel agency, Tongcheng, set up several special routes for Hangzhou residents. Its G20 route from Hangzhou to Phuket, Thailand, and Bali, Indonesia, provided a “second person free” offer.

It also offers discount coupons.

“About 4,000 coupons were downloaded a week after the government released its off-work notice,” said Li Dan, a manager at Tongcheng’s Zhejiang branch.

Nearby cities and provinces are also pouncing on the potential market.

Neighborin­g cities in Zhejiang province — Taizhou, Wenzhou and Quzhou — provide free tickets to scenic spots for visitors with a Hangzhou identifica­tion. Jiangsu province offered an extreme incentive program under which visitors from Hangzhou can pay 1 yuan ($0.15) and enjoy classic travel service.

Kanas National Geopark in the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region — the well-known scenic attraction 4,500 kilometers from Hangzhou — offered 500 free entrance tickets specifical­ly for Hangzhou residents.

About 4,000 coupons were downloaded a week after the government released its off-work notice.” Li Dan, manager at Tongcheng’s Zhejiang branch

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