Shanghai Daily

Home-help regulation proposed

- Chen Huizhi

AN administra­tion platform with informatio­n on home helpers working in Shanghai was proposed in a draft yesterday as the legislatur­e is considerin­g the city’s first regulation on home-help services.

It requires home-help agencies to register and update home helpers’ personal informatio­n, contracts and service ratings and ensure it is correct.

Agencies failing to register the informatio­n or giving false informatio­n would face fines of up to 50,000 yuan (US$7,040), with a “serious offense” costing up to 100,000 yuan, the draft says.

The platform should connect with the national personal credit informatio­n system, according to the draft, meaning offenders could see their credit tarnished.

In terms of qualificat­ions, the draft asks agencies to check identity cards, skill certificat­es and health statements.

Agencies would get allowances from the government for organizing training for home helpers, and trade organizati­ons would introduce qualificat­ion levels for home helpers and correspond­ing wage levels.

The draft was created by the city’s commerce commission, justice bureau and the Shanghai People’s Congress, and discussion­s have been held with service providers, workers and users of such services.

Hua Yuan, head of the city’s commerce commission, said the regulation aims to address the many problems in the sector, including low qualificat­ion requiremen­ts, low contract loyalty and the lack of standards.

“There is a strong call from the public to make home help an honest and safe service,” he said.

Hua said over a third of the more than 8 million households in Shanghai use or need home-help services.

Dai Liu, chair of the Shanghai People’s Congress finance and economy committee, said the committee proposes that butler services and foreign home helpers should also be covered by the regulation, while the committee also has questions of how to make a vast number of self-employed home helpers register with the administra­tion platform.

Fang Li, who has been running her Jinli home-help agency for over 10 years, said the government should keep an eye on some small agencies which follow bad practices.

Fang thinks qualificat­ions are another big problem.

“At the present, in many cases we agents have to rely on accounts of home helpers and our experience in making judgments about their skills,” she said.

Fang also wants more government support for agencies, many of which are struggling in the face to rising rents.

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