According to the report of the Department of Home Affairs, from July 1 to now, the two-level local government apparatus in Hung Yen has been operating stably, effectively performing political tasks and ensuring security and social order.
Departments and branches proactively advise and issue documents guiding localities to carry out related tasks, and at the same time establish a standing working group to support communes and wards in removing obstacles in the process of operating the new model, especially in personnel arrangement, working conditions and functions and tasks.
The Provincial Public Administration Service Center and 104 commune-level points received a total of 156,230 records from July 1 to August 13, of which 134,251 were online records and 21,979 were in-person records. The rate of online application submission reached nearly 86%, ranking Hung Yen 11th out of 34 provinces and cities. All 2,119 administrative procedures have been published on the National Public Service Portal with full electronic forms and processes. Currently, 27 communes and wards have granted land use right certificates to people.
In addition, the operation of the two-level government still faces some difficulties: the quality of commune-level cadres is not uniform, lacking professional personnel in important fields such as health, education, construction, natural resources - environment; information technology infrastructure in some centers is still limited; some instructions from the central government are not complete; regulations on the organization and personnel of public service units at the commune level are unclear; problems in financial management, signing contracts and implementing transitional projects.
Communes and wards have proposed adding professional civil servants and teachers, perfecting guidelines for managing educational and medical facilities when decentralized; reviewing and rotating cadres and civil servants between communes; arranging personnel with the right expertise, capacity, and strengths, prioritizing the fields of health, education, and information technology.

Vice Chairman of the Provincial People's Committee Pham Van Nghiem has requested the People's Committees of communes and wards to urgently issue regulations on functions and tasks for specialized departments and branches; continue to review and arrange cadres, ensure no shortage of leadership positions; arrange civil servants with the right capacity and strengths, overcome local surplus and shortage.
The Department of Home Affairs will coordinate with the Department of Education and Training and the Department of Health to guide the appointment of management staff and implement rotation between communes. The Department of Finance inspects and guides salary payments, advises on adjusting medium-term public investment plans and allocating budgets to carry out urgent tasks.
Departments and branches also review the work of resolving the regime and policies for cadres, civil servants and public employees who quit their jobs, implement staff streamlining according to regulations, and ensure the right subjects.
Provincial leaders note that localities should hand over records and assets between old and new administrative units in accordance with regulations to avoid loss and waste. At the same time, departments and branches have increased staff to coordinate with communes and wards to promptly handle arising issues, contributing to the operation of a synchronous and smooth two-level government model, serving people and businesses better in the coming time.