Beijing's municipal government will issue migrant workers at
construction sites free multi-functional identity cards this year
to prevent wage defaults and facilitate management.
The card can be used for banking, as an identity document for
insurance purposes, training courses, and as a work attendance
record.
The Beijing municipal construction committee announced yesterday
it will issue 600,000 such cards to migrant workers in the city's
construction industry.
Projects that have a construction area of more than 5,000 sq m
or costs more than 5 million yuan (US$647,000) and a construction
period of more than six months, must ensure that more than 95
percent of the migrant workers have the card.
Tao Liming, president of the Postal Savings Bank of China, said
each card has a corresponding deposit book, which contractors can
deposit wages into.
"With the card, migrant workers will not have to carry a lot of
cash with them when they return to their hometowns," he said.
The card also provides information to the public security and
labor departments so they can keep abreast of the city's floating
population, said Sui Zhenjiang, director the Beijing committee.
The committee will closely monitor the implementation of the
card, he said.
Action will be taken against companies that refuse to promote
the card.
"We will expose the companies which do not pay wages on time in
the media," Sui said.
Migrant workers can inform the committee by calling 6358-5182 if
their company refuses to apply for the cards.
"It is indeed a good thing," said Zhang Jianmin, a migrant
worker from Central China's Hubei Province, working at a
construction site near the Worker's Stadium.
"I hope the government enforces proper surveillance to ensure
the card works well," he said.
Last year the city's construction companies defaulted 1.628
billion yuan (US$211 million) in wages.
(China Daily April 26, 2007)
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