The Japan News by The Yomiuri Shimbun

Noto quake-hit municipali­ties suffer population outflow

- The Yomiuri Shimbun

Population outflow is rapidly progressin­g in four cities and towns in the Okunoto region of Ishikawa Prefecture that was severely damaged by the Noto Peninsula Earthquake on New Year's Day.

The cities of Wajima and Suzu, and towns of Noto and Anamizu, with a total population of just under 60,000, had a total net outflow of 1,582 people from January through March, with the number increasing each month.

The figure is 3.8 times that of the same period last year.

The question is whether people will return to the municipali­ties and whether their communitie­s can be revitalize­d and maintained again. Reconstruc­tion is a race against the clock.

Shingo Koie, 40, who ran a chiropract­ic clinic in Suzu decided to leave his hometown.

A hill behind his house collapsed during the earthquake, sending an avalanche of earth and sand onto his house in the city, destroying it.

His 3-year-old son was seriously injured, breaking his collarbone, and his clinic was badly damaged.

Since March, Koie has been helping his 42-year-old brother, who runs a chiropract­or clinic in Kyoto. He plans to move to Kanazawa in the summer with his wife, 40, and two children and open a chiropract­ic clinic there as that is his wife's hometown.

He made this decision after much considerat­ion. He opened his clinic in 2017 in Suzu, hoping to support the well-being of the Okunoto region after returning to the city from outside the prefecture when his mother became ill.

The clinic attracted regular customers. However, Koie was not sure if he would be able to continue running it because many residents evacuated outside

Suzu after the earthquake.

His wife's words also influenced his decision: “Our children are very young, and we're afraid of aftershock­s.”

There are concerns that the exodus of the child-rearing generation will continue if there are no places for them to live and work. Also, even before the earthquake, the four cities and towns had been experienci­ng severe depopulati­on.

According to the national census, from 2010 to 2020 the population decreased 1.5% nationwide. Ishikawa Prefecture shrank 3.2% in that time, with Wajima dropping 17.6% and Suzu 20.7%. The number of people age 65 and over is around 50% in the four municipali­ties, about 20 percentage points higher than the national average.

Population decline is also an issue in areas affected by the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake.

As of March, the population of 12 coastal municipali­ties in Iwate Prefecture fell 23.1% from March 2011 levels, more than double the 10.3% decline in inland areas. In Otsuchi in the prefecture, which saw a 33% decline, the number of people under 30 dropped by about 45%.

“The younger people are, the less likely they are to return if they don't have a job,” an Otsuchi municipal government official said. “We needed to rebuild housing and town functions more quickly.”

In Wajima, 45% of those who moved out of the city in January and February were under 30 years old. Mayor Shigeru Sakaguchi did not hide his impatience, saying, “I hope the prefectura­l government will do its best to promote the constructi­on of emergency temporary housing.”

A total of 1,440 temporary

housing units have been completed in the four cities and towns, but the constructi­on of public housing for disaster victims has yet to begin.

Notosaku Co., a constructi­on company in Suzu, spent ¥15 million in late February to build eight prefabrica­ted houses near the company for its employees.

“If there are no people left, restoratio­n and reconstruc­tion will not happen," said Notosaku President Kazunobu Myojo, 57.

The central government and Ishikawa Prefecture have establishe­d the “Nariwai reconstruc­tion assistance grant” to support the restoratio­n of facilities of small and midsize enterprise­s affected by the disaster.

However, only 27 applicatio­ns were received in the first round, and only six applicatio­ns with complete documentat­ion

were accepted. Of these, only one was for a company in the Okunoto region.

The applicatio­n process was complicate­d and, in addition, some people were wondering whether they should continue to run their business, said a senior prefectura­l government official.

“It is essential to restore the industries that support the region's vitality to stop the outflow of the population,” said University of Tokyo Prof. Miho Ohara, who specialize­s in disaster risk reduction.

“Support for procuremen­t and tourism from outside the affected areas is also important. It will be crucial for the government­s and residents to work together to determine what kind of reconstruc­tion, including such support, should be pursued, and to present [a reconstruc­tion plan] as soon as possible,” she said.

 ?? The Yomiuri Shimbun ?? Shingo Koie, right, looks at the landscape changed by the earthquake as he visits his destroyed home in Suzu, Ishikawa Prefecture, on March 28.
The Yomiuri Shimbun Shingo Koie, right, looks at the landscape changed by the earthquake as he visits his destroyed home in Suzu, Ishikawa Prefecture, on March 28.

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