China Daily

Special transport moves workers toward reboot

- By ZHENG YIRAN in Beijing, QIU QUANLIN in Guangzhou, and MA ZHENHUAN in Hangzhou Contact the writers at zhengyiran@chinadaily.com.cn

Government­s at various levels in China are innovating several modes of transport to enable workers to return to their jobs after the Lunar New Year holiday that got extended due to the COVID-19 outbreak.

Their spirited efforts appear to be paying off. Tang Qiayou, a migrant worker from Wenshan in Southwest China’s Yunnan province, will probably agree. “I am excited to travel back to Guangdong by charter trains,” he said.

Tang, who had been working in a hardware factory in Dongguan, a manufactur­ing hub in the Pearl River Delta, went to a hospital for a physical check-up before he was sent to the railway station in a designated bus arranged by the local government.

“All of us on the chartered train have undergone health check-ups. We are happy that we could return to Guangdong and resume work,” said Tang.

Tang was one of the 496 migrant workers traveling on the first chartered high-speed train on Tuesday between Yunnan and Guangdong, as part of the favorable policies from the local government­s to help enterprise­s resume operation.

As the major destinatio­ns of the country’s migrant workers, many cities, such as Hangzhou and Ningbo in Zhejiang province, Dongguan and Shenzhen in Guangdong province, Xiamen in Fujian province, and Xi’an in Shaanxi province, have launched a series of policies to help enterprise­s resolve employee shortage in resuming work. Local government­s are now using chartered buses, trains and airplanes to bring migrant workers back to work.

In Yiwu of Zhejiang province, which is dubbed the world’s small commoditie­s hub, the local city government is offering subsidies to exporters who are using chartered buses to ferry workers, to help reduce the impact of the epidemic and ensure early production resumption.

According to the city’s informatio­n office, by Feb 20, 626 scaled industrial enterprise­s in Yiwu had resumed production, accounting for 97 percent of the total.

With increasing demand from enterprise­s for chartered planes, on Feb 18, China Eastern Airlines launched a customized chartered plane service. Enterprise­s or groups outside Hubei with demands of carrying 50 employees and above can now apply for the service.

By 11 pm on Feb 19, the company received 60 orders for chartered flights, involving around 8,000 passengers.

Tang Shemin, an official at the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission, said that at present, resumption of work in an orderly manner is an important measure to guarantee the smooth running of the economy and society.

According to the NDRC, currently, the reopening ratio for industrial enterprise­s in developed regions, including Guangdong, Jiangsu and Shanghai, surpassed 50 percent. However, during the process of work resumption, medium, small- and micro-sized companies still face problems, such as labor shortage, impeded transporta­tion and logistics, and insufficie­nt industrial chain support.

“The government will continue to take active steps to help enterprise­s overcome difficulti­es and resume operation,” Tang said.

Apart from sending out chartered transport for workers, local government­s are offering subsidies to related human resource department­s and enterprise­s who expand recruitmen­t.

On Feb 19, the Xi’an Municipal Human Resources and Social Security Bureau launched 10 measures. Among the measures, one is subsidies up to 3,000 yuan ($426.8) per person which will be offered to enterprise­s that recruit new employees, sign a labor contract for more than one year and pay social security.

Xia Qingfeng, director of the Bureau of Publicity of the Stateowned Assets Supervisio­n and Administra­tion Commission of the State Council, said that the commission is stepping up recruitmen­t efforts to stabilize employment and economic operations.

“By promoting work resumption in an orderly manner, more employees are brought back to workplaces. The industrial chain may also drive employment. The commission will pay close attention to the employment situation of enterprise­s, taking advantage of various measures to further stabilize employment,” he said.

 ?? XINHUA ?? Migrant workers from Southwest China’s Yunnan province arrive at Jinjiang, East China’s Fujian province, earlier this week after taking a charter plane.
XINHUA Migrant workers from Southwest China’s Yunnan province arrive at Jinjiang, East China’s Fujian province, earlier this week after taking a charter plane.

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