HCMC completes the arrangement of neighborhoods and hamlets, reducing 2,022 units

MINH QUÂN |

Ho Chi Minh City has completed the arrangement of neighborhoods and hamlets throughout the area, reducing from 5,947 to 3,925 units - equivalent to a reduction of 2,022 units (34%).

Ho Chi Minh City People's Committee has just reported on the results of implementing the arrangement of villages and residential groups and arranging, using, and resolving regimes and policies for non-specialized workers (NHĐKCT) at the commune and neighborhood level, hamlet, village, and residential area.

Before the arrangement, Ho Chi Minh City had 168 commune-level administrative units with a total of 5,947 neighborhoods, hamlets, villages and residential areas, including 4,196 neighborhoods, 1,733 hamlets, 9 villages and 9 residential areas.

According to the overall plan, the city is expected to reduce it to 3,944 units, corresponding to a reduction of 2,003 neighborhoods, hamlets, villages and residential areas.

However, during the actual implementation process, Ho Chi Minh City continued to review and adjust, so the number after arrangement is 3,925 neighborhoods, hamlets, villages and residential areas - a decrease of 2,022 units, equivalent to about 34% compared to before arrangement. Compared to the initial plan, the city reduced by another 19 units.

In which, 1,555 neighborhoods, hamlets, villages and residential areas are kept unchanged due to meeting the standards for the scale of households according to regulations.

Newly established 1,164 units based on the original arrangement with adjacent neighborhoods and hamlets and 1,206 new units through the separation and reorganization of neighborhoods, hamlets, villages and adjacent residential areas to suit the population size.

Along with arranging neighborhoods and hamlets, Ho Chi Minh City also deploys the arrangement, use and settlement of regimes and policies for non-specialized personnel at the commune level.

Accordingly, 222 people have been recruited into civil servants, 220 people have been recruited into public employees, 313 people have signed work contracts and 209 people have been arranged to work in neighborhoods, hamlets, villages, and residential areas.

To date, the city has issued decisions to resolve benefits for 4,357 people. Only 9 cases are still being processed due to maternity leave or raising children under 36 months old according to the guidance of the Ministry of Home Affairs.

For the team of non-specialized personnel in neighborhoods, hamlets, villages and residential areas, through review, there are 17,678 people working at 5,947 units before arrangement.

After reorganization, the city arranged 11,775 people in 3,925 neighborhoods, hamlets, villages and residential areas - a decrease of 5,903 people compared to before.

In addition, Ho Chi Minh City plans to arrange about 15,423 people to participate in activities in neighborhoods, hamlets, villages and residential areas - a decrease of about 12,399 people compared to before.

Ho Chi Minh City also terminated the operation of 10,795 self-managed people's groups and self-managed residential groups in localities in region II (Binh Duong province before arrangement) and region III (Ba Ria - Vung Tau province before arrangement). About 21,950 heads and deputy heads of these groups also terminated their duties according to regulations.

MINH QUÂN
RELATED NEWS

HCMC cuts nearly 40,000 personnel after arranging neighborhoods and hamlets

|

Ho Chi Minh City reduced nearly 40,000 personnel when rearranging neighborhoods, hamlets, villages, residential areas and terminating the operation of self-managed people's groups and residential groups.

29 communes in Ho Chi Minh City meet the criteria for becoming wards, taking people's opinions before June 18

|

Ho Chi Minh City is seeking people's opinions on the establishment of 29 new wards based on the status quo of existing communes, to be completed before June 18.

HCMC reviews and rearranges nearly 6,000 neighborhoods, hamlets, and residential areas

|

Ho Chi Minh City urgently reviews and develops plans to rearrange nearly 6,000 neighborhoods, hamlets, villages, and residential areas in the area according to new regulations of the Government.

126 communes and wards in Hanoi review all slow-progress projects

|

Hanoi - Departments, branches and 126 communes and wards review all slow-progressing projects.

The journey to bring children from the "quiet world" to the sounds of life

|

Many families think their children are just slow to speak, and when they are taken for hearing tests, they discover that their children have poor hearing, and they have to implant cochlear electrodes to regain their sound.

More than 3.8 million subscribers reopened after being one-way locked

|

After a period of one-way lock deployment, more than 3.8 million subscribers have completed standardization and services have been restored.

Hai Phong to open pedestrian street in the center, bustling until midnight

|

Hai Phong - The city is expected to open a pedestrian street in early August, operating from 4:00 PM to 12:00 PM on Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays every week.

New salary policy to be submitted to the 5th Central Conference

|

The Ministry of Home Affairs is focusing on preparing carefully and proposing specific options for implementing salary policy reform according to the roadmap.

HCMC cuts nearly 40,000 personnel after arranging neighborhoods and hamlets

MINH QUÂN |

Ho Chi Minh City reduced nearly 40,000 personnel when rearranging neighborhoods, hamlets, villages, residential areas and terminating the operation of self-managed people's groups and residential groups.

29 communes in Ho Chi Minh City meet the criteria for becoming wards, taking people's opinions before June 18

MINH QUÂN |

Ho Chi Minh City is seeking people's opinions on the establishment of 29 new wards based on the status quo of existing communes, to be completed before June 18.

HCMC reviews and rearranges nearly 6,000 neighborhoods, hamlets, and residential areas

MINH QUÂN |

Ho Chi Minh City urgently reviews and develops plans to rearrange nearly 6,000 neighborhoods, hamlets, villages, and residential areas in the area according to new regulations of the Government.