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New Seoul mayor seeks overhaul in quarantine, real estate policies
Posted : 2021-04-11 16:15
Updated : 2021-04-12 09:28
Newly elected Seoul Mayor Oh Se-hoon, left, speaks with a quarantine official at a makeshift coronavirus testing clinic at Seoul Station, Saturday. Yonhap
By Bahk Eun-ji
New Seoul Mayor Oh Se-hoon, who took office right after Wednesday s by-elections, is seeking to change the central government s quarantine and real estate policies, which many of the public are unhappy with.
After visiting a temporary screening center for COVID-19 at Seoul Station, Saturday, Oh said he would review the increased rate of government-assessed home valuations to prevent housing prices from soaring further.
SeoulSoult-ukpyolsiSouth-koreaJejuCheju-doSeochoBahk-eun-jiSeocho-district-officeMinistry-of-landSeoul-mayor-oh-se-hoonSeoul-stationNew Seoul mayor may seek to reverse predecessor s policies
Posted : 2021-04-07 23:26
Updated : 2021-04-08 05:31 Oh Se-hoon, third from right, the Seoul mayoral candidate of the main opposition People Power Party, bumps fists with a party member at party headquarters on Seoul s Yeouido, Wednesday, before an exit poll was announced. Oh gained 59 percent in the preliminary exit poll jointly released by three broadcasters. Yonhap
By Bahk Eun-ji
Oh Se-hoon of the conservative main opposition People Power Party (PPP), who again became Seoul mayor following Wednesday s by-election, is expected to revive some of the signature policies he pursued previously while serving as mayor of the capital between 2006 and 2011.
SeoulSoult-ukpyolsiSouth-koreaIncheonInch-on-gwangyoksiSeochoKoreaCho-eun-heeLee-jun-hanBahk-eun-jiSeocho-district-officeUnnecessary random testing causes burden for quarantine work
Posted : 2021-01-15 16:00
Updated : 2021-01-17 10:36
Public servants of Gyeonggi Provincial Government and its affiliates line up for coronavirus tests at a makeshift testing center set up at the provincial government building compound in Suwon, Wednesday. Yonhap
By Bahk Eun-ji
As the third wave of COVID-19 pandemic drags on, more and more local governments, institutions and companies are urging residents and employees to get tested.
Although the move is aimed at preventing the spread of infection in advance, some point out that it is inefficient to conduct random tests for all residents or all workers regardless of whether they have been in contact with the virus. It is also a concern that mass testing will increase the workload for quarantine workers and waste administrative costs.
SeoulSoult-ukpyolsiSouth-koreaSeochoGyeonggiKyonggi-doSuwonCheju-doKoreaBahk-eun-jiHallym-university-sungsim-hospital