Shanghai Daily

Local festivitie­s for Taiwan firms’ staff

- Yang Meiping

THE majority of employees at some Taiwan-invested companies in Shanghai will stay in the city during the Spring Festival holiday due to tightened pandemic prevention and control measures and incentives provided by their employers.

At Quanta Shanghai Manufactur­ing City in suburban Songjiang District, 85 to 90 percent of its 39,553 employees will not return to their hometowns, said Chen Guofeng, associate vice president of human resources.

“We will provide the employees who joined us before January 17 and have normal attendance from January 18 to March 17 with 4,000 yuan (US$618.8) each and all the employees will get 200 yuan for their work each day between February 12 and 17 besides overtime pay,” he said.

“By doing so, we hope they can stay in the city and reduce travel, making a contributi­on to the government’s efforts in curbing the pandemic.”

The company specialize­s in the production of computers, servers, cloud-based products and automotive electronic­s. Chen said the company has been doing well and needs workers to meet demand.

The company is also hosting about 1,200 train attendants who are idle due to the reduction in train services because of the pandemic and are working in the company in turn in three batches between January 29 and March 20.

They will also enjoy extra pay if they work during the holiday, Chen revealed.

Jiang Xinxun, a manager of the company’s employee life service division, said they had arranged a number of activities for employees who are staying back in the city.

“On Chinese New Year’s Eve, the employees living in our dorms will make dumplings in separate rooms and watch the CCTV Spring Festival Gala. Those who live elsewhere can have semi-cooked food packages to have dinner at home.”

Over the following days, there will be a chess competitio­n, paper-cutting, lantern making, physical exercise offline and a love song singing competitio­n online.

There are also 266 employees from Taiwan and 90 percent of them will stay put during the week-long holiday.

Lee Kuo-Suei, associate vice president of the company’s management division, will be one of those who remain.

“My family is here and the celebratio­ns for Spring Festival are similar in Taiwan and in Shanghai,” he said. “We can spend the festival with our friends here and visit local tourist destinatio­ns, such as the Guangfulin Relics Park. Thanks to technology, we can also see our relatives in Taiwan via apps such as WeChat. It’s really convenient.”

Catherine Huang, public relations manager of Shanghai Baker’s Kingdom Co and a livestream broadcaste­r dedicated to promoting products from impoverish­ed areas, said she will invite friends to her home in Shanghai and launch a livestream event on Chinese New Year to promote the traditions of New Year celebratio­ns and specialtie­s of Taiwan.

Jackson Jian, general manager of design firm Genius Union, said most of its 15 employees will stay back, including five of the six from Taiwan.

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