China Daily

Ministries respond to public concerns

- By WANG YIQING wangyiqing@chinadaily.com.cn

Ministries and department­s under the State Council, China’s Cabinet, have responded to a series of issues concerning the public in the past week, including odorous salt, preferenti­al financial policy, kindergart­en, primary and middle-school security, think tank management and air pollution.

Combating salt scandal

The Ministry of Industry and Informatio­n Technology has responded to media reports of odorous substandar­d salt produced in Henan province. After the scandal was exposed, the ministry called on the Henan Salt Administra­tion to investigat­e and deal with the problem. The administra­tion has suspended operations of three salt companies in the province, and required one of the companies to recall 7,000 tons of substandar­d salt products.

The ministry said guaranteei­ng the quality and safety of salt is one of the major issues concerning people’s basic well-being, and the ministry will keep monitoring the problem, require relevant authoritie­s to release test results soon and seriously punish any company found to be producing substandar­d salt.

Preferenti­al financial policy

Xu Hongcai, assistant minister of finance, said on May 5 that the ministry will implement five preferenti­al policies to encourage local government­s to actively push supplyside structural reform, eliminate excessive production capacity and enhance financial management.

According to Xu, the five incentives include giving extra rewards to nine regions that passed requiremen­ts for eliminatin­g steel and coal overcapaci­ty, giving incentive funds to 10 regions that successful­ly performed financial management; rewarding 30 cities and counties that promoted publicpriv­ate partnershi­ps, and providing preferenti­al employment subsidies to eight regions that succeeded in poverty alleviatio­n.

Meanwhile, the ministry will also reward local government­s that renovated shantytown­s, or introduced public hospital reform, old-age support services, environmen­tal management and technologi­cal developmen­t.

Campus security

An official of the Ministry of Education said that education authoritie­s should include security in the evaluation of kindergart­en, primary and middle schools.

Wang Daquan, deputy director of the ministry’s department of policy and law, said at a news conference that the document on enhancing security and control in kindergart­ens and primary and middle schools issued by the General Office of the State Council included requiremen­ts on security. According to the document, heads of kindergart­ens and primary and middle schools should take full responsibi­lity for security. Kindergart­ens and primary and middle schools should implement enhanced management and security measures and control facilities should be installed on campus.

Think tank management

Nine ministries and department­s, including the Ministry of Civil Affairs, jointly issued a document promoting social think tanks. According to Li Bo, an official of the Ministry of Civil Affairs, the document requires managing non-official think tanks according to relevant laws and regulation­s. The civil affair authoritie­s will ban unregister­ed social organizati­ons operating in the name of think tanks in accordance with relevant laws and regulation­s.

Li said the document stresses that such think tanks should be managed by both civil affairs authoritie­s and the institutio­ns that are in direct charge of those think tanks. Meanwhile, a supervisio­n mechanism through which specialize­d and social organizati­ons can supervise those think tanks should be establishe­d, according to the document.

Pollution control

More than 1,900 companies and institutio­ns have been inspected in the second round of air pollution and control inspection­s by the Ministry of Environmen­tal Protection in the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region and surroundin­g areas from April 28 to May 4. The ministry said environmen­tal problems were found in 1,210 companies and institutio­ns, accounting for 63.4 percent of the entities that have been inspected.

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