City to publish infrastructure building plans (Shanghai.gov.cn) Updated: 2006-04-13 09:45 Later this year, Shanghai
residents will gain access to detailed plans about their neighborhoods and learn
whether they'll be affected by new parks, Metro lines, or other infrastructure
projects, a top city official said yesterday.
"One of major tasks for this year is to make our government more transparent,
particularly in urban planning that requires relocations," Qiao Zhigang, deputy
director of the Shanghai Informatization Commission, told a municipal conference
yesterday.
He said the government is now considering methods for publicizing its urban
development plan and schedule for neighborhood relocation.
The most likely venue for the new information source will be the Websites of
government departments, Qiao said.
A decision hasn't been made yet on whether the planning period to be revealed
will be three or five years or some other time frame.
Some officials said they often receive complaints from residents about a lack
of transparency when the government forces people to relocate.
"Transparent urban planning is an obligation of a responsible government,"
said Huang Yuehai, a laid-off worker living in Yangpu District.
He said people should know where new subways, elevated roads and other
infrastructure projects will be built.
The city plans to triple the length of its current metro system by 2010 for
the World Expo.
By June, more than 13,000 families and 1,000 companies will have been
relocated this year to make way for the new metro stations.
Another 18,000 families will be relocated by next month to make way for
construction of World Expo sites, municipal government spokeswoman Jiao Yang
said.
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