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Shanghai has surpassed its promise of doing "11 good deeds" for residents
this year, such as lowering public transport fares and improving medical
services, the city government announced yesterday, Shanghai Daily
reported.
"The government has fulfilled and exceeded its promise made
early this year to the citizens," Municipal spokeswoman Jiao Yang said
yesterday.
To improve public transport, a 25-percent fare discount has
been applied for bus passengers of 409 bus routes, 109 more than the government
committed itself to.
The government has upgraded traffic signs and
improved road conditions around primary, middle schools and kindergartens. It
has also painted a universal logo on 551 school shuttle buses to make them
easily identifiable.
For the old and weak people, the government has
standardized 400 rural clinics, added 100 new ambulances, and conducted free
optical surgery for 3,506 patients with cataracts.
It has installed
household emergency call devices for 20,000 senior residents who live alone,
provided home services for 135,000 seniors and opened 21 new daily care centers
for the elderly.
The government has also upgraded the city's 240 recovery
and activity centers for the mentally retarded.
In addition to transport
and medical care, the government has created 703,000 jobs, provided training
lessons for 547,000 farmers and workers, and standardized 202 wet markets. To
improve safety, the government has pasted electric-recognition bars on 1.14
million tanks of liquefied cooking gas and other hazardous chemicals.
The
spokeswoman said the city's infrastructure and environmental protection projects
were going "smoothly."
Among them: six new tunnels across the Huangpu
River are being built; a gigantic underground vehicle passage below the Bund
area, the Zhongshan Road E1, has started construction; and the third phase of
the Suzhou Creek clean-up project has started.
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