China Daily

Special trains carry migrant workers back

Free chartered services make it easier for people to return to work in Guangdong

- By QIU QUANLIN in Rongjiang, Guizhou qiuquanlin@ chinadaily. com. cn

After spending the Spring Festival holiday at home, Zhang Jiayang took a special chartered train from Rongjiang county, Guizhou province, to Guangzhou, capital of Guangdong province, on Monday, ready to return to work.

“I took some cured and salted meat made by my mother back to Guangdong,” she said.

After a journey of about six hours on the chartered train, Zhang, 24, took a chartered bus to her workplace in Dongguan, Guangdong.

Before she began working in Dongguan, Zhang’s family, living in a remote mountainou­s village in Rongjiang, mainly relied on farming, with an annual income of only about 10,000 yuan ($ 1,400).

After five years of work at an electronic­s factory, the life of Zhang’s family has significan­tly improved, with a yearly income of over 60,000 yuan.

“My family has now built a new house and purchased home appliances,” Zhang said, adding her goals in the new year are to obtain a driver’s license and buy a car.

The chartered high- speed trains and buses for Zhang and over 600 other migrant workers returning to work on Monday were organized by human resources and social security authoritie­s in Guangdong and Guizhou.

After the first free chartered train departed from Zunyi, Guizhou, on Thursday, authoritie­s in Guangdong intensifie­d efforts to increase the frequency of special trains for workers.

The trains mostly departed from the provinces of Guizhou and Hu - nan and the Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region, major sources of labor for Guangdong, according to Guangdong Human Resources and Social Security Department.

China Railway Guangzhou Group said over 90 percent of the migrant workers in Guangdong were expected to return to their workplaces after the Spring Festival holiday.

The railway authoritie­s said they would operate 24 special trains for migrant workers, providing “pointto- point” transporta­tion services, with an estimated 15,000 people expected to be transporte­d to Guangdong after the holiday.

Chartered buses were also organized by local human resources authoritie­s to transport workers from high- speed railway stations to their workplaces.

“The free return- to- work special train and bus services have relieved us from the hassle of scrambling for tickets and changing trains,” said Shi Biao, a 45- year- old worker from Guizhou.

After arriving at Guangzhou South Railway Station in the afternoon, Shi was ready to return to work at a garment factory in Guangzhou’s Haizhu district.

“My job is to deliver work clothes for a shipping company,” Shi said.

“It was so busy last year that I frequently needed to drive between the two companies.”

Before the departure of the chartered trains, the Guangdong human resources authoritie­s also launched several job events in Guizhou to promote Guangdong’s employment policies and services, aiming to recruit more tech- savvy and experience­d workers.

After the Spring Festival holiday, Guangdong, an economic powerhouse in South China, will organize more than 2,000 job fairs and recruitmen­t events to provide job opportunit­ies for migrant workers returning to the province, the local human resources authoritie­s said.

“After spending the holidays at home, I wanted to come to Guangzhou to find a job as there are many companies recruiting online,” said Wang Minli, 23, from Rongjiang.

Wang recently resigned from a private company and received interview invitation­s from several companies before arriving in Guangzhou.

“I hope to find a satisfacto­ry job and make my parents’ lives happier,” she said after arriving at Guangzhou South Railway Station on Monday.

In addition to organizing recruitmen­t events, the Guangdong human resources authoritie­s said skills training for workers in companies and vocational schools would be prioritize­d to provide more skilled workers for the high- quality developmen­t of the province.

 ?? QIU QUANLIN / CHINA DAILY ?? Migrant workers enter a train station in Rongjiang county, Guizhou province, to board a chartered train to return to work in Guangzhou, Guangdong province, on Monday.
QIU QUANLIN / CHINA DAILY Migrant workers enter a train station in Rongjiang county, Guizhou province, to board a chartered train to return to work in Guangzhou, Guangdong province, on Monday.

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