The Borneo Post

In Japan, police plan to dispose of lost umbrellas sooner

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TOKYO: Police department­s in Japan are struggling to handle the rising number of unclaimed umbrellas.

In Tokyo, about 3,300 lost umbrellas are recovered per rainy day, but only about one per cent are reclaimed.

Although police have introduced a system that allows people to search for lost items on the Internet, the per centage of reclaims has not risen and police storage facilities are approachin­g full capacity.

To reduce storage costs, the National Police Agency is considerin­g getting prefectura­l police department­s that lack space to dispose of unclaimed umbrellas and other inexpensiv­e items two weeks after processing them.

About 100,000 umbrellas recovered by railway operators in Tokyo fill the racks of an about 1,200-square-metre storage space in the basement of the Metropolit­an Police Department’s Lost and Found Centre in Bunkyo Ward, Tokyo.

The centre said about 3,300 umbrellas on average are received on rainy days. As a result, its racks are permanentl­y full.

Although work to expand the space has been carried out since last year, it has not kept pace with the steady stream of umbrellas that continue to flood the centre.

The Lost Property Law stipulates that lost items reported to authoritie­s should be kept for three months, in principle. But a 2007 revision permits police to dispose of inexpensiv­e items such as umbrellas after two weeks.

However, police officials continue to store cheap items for three months, partly because they are wary of receiving complaints from owners.

The head of the MPD’s Lost and Found Centre said that even if items are cheap, it is possible that they are gifts or have sentimenta­l value, making it difficult to dispose of them after such a short period of time.

The per centage of umbrellas reclaimed from the centre is 0.7 per cent. Lost umbrellas that are not claimed within the allocated time period are returned to railway companies or other organizati­ons that brought them to the centre. Finally, they are discarded or sold as recycled goods. According to the NPA, there were 18,964,770 cases of lost items being reported to the authoritie­s in 2015 nationwide, up about 12 million since 2006.

However, the number of reports submitted by owners of lost items was 4,416,969, up only about 900,000 in the same period.

An online service was introduced in 2007 on prefectura­l police headquarte­rs’ websites for people to search for lost items by submitting informatio­n such as dates and locations. But the reality is that the per centage of lost items being returned to owners has not risen.

In 2014, the NPA checked the return per centages of lost items across the nation.

The per centage of valuable items, such as driver’s licences, bank cards and mobile phones, was high at 85.9 per cent. But that of umbrellas was one per cent, and that of handkerchi­efs was 1.6 per cent.

The Cabinet Office conducted a lost items survey on about 3,000 people in October and November last year.

Of the 1,804 respondent­s, 74.5 per cent said it is all right if inexpensiv­e unclaimed items are discarded or sold after two weeks or even before two weeks.

The survey results encouraged the NPA, which has been worried about the lack of storage space, to change its stance.

An NPA official said: “I wonder if, in this era of mass consumptio­n, people’s affections toward their belongings have decreased. People probably consider it too costly to bother searching for cheap lost items.”

But the official stressed, “We want people to understand that storing lost items is also costly.”

To raise the per centage of lost items that are returned, the NPA will revise as early as April the regulation­s of the Lost Property Law so that owners can arrange via telephone to have their recovered items delivered.

Under the current regulation­s, if it is difficult for owners to collect their lost items at police stations in person, they have to download applicatio­n forms from police websites and send relevant informatio­n by mail with reply envelopes. — The Japan News/ Yomiuri

 ??  ?? Lost umbrellas are shown stored in the Metropolit­an Police Department’s Lost and Found Centre in Bunkyo Ward, Tokyo. — Photo by Japan News-Yomiuri
Lost umbrellas are shown stored in the Metropolit­an Police Department’s Lost and Found Centre in Bunkyo Ward, Tokyo. — Photo by Japan News-Yomiuri

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