Pyeongtaek City (Mayor Jeong Jang-seon) announced that it held a business report to end the year in the city hall conference room on the 17th, hosted by the Pyeongtaek City Neighborhood Dispute Resolution Center.
At the event, about 100 people participated, including guests such as Pyeongtaek City Vice Mayor Lim Jong-cheol and National Assembly member Hong Ki-won, neighborhood dispute mediators (communication room, reconciliation mediation committee members, counselors, supporters), and related organizations and organizations.
Part 1 of the event included presentations on the performance of the Neighborhood Dispute Mediation Center over the past year, commendations from the mayor, city council chairman, and National Assembly members were awarded to excellent activists as neighbor dispute mediators, and awards were given to eight people selected through the 3rd Good Neighbor Case Contest. also took place.
Part 2 consisted of a presentation on the activities of the communication room and a sharing session for neighborhood dispute mediators.
In his congratulatory address, Vice Mayor Lim Jong-cheol of Pyeongtaek City said, “I would like to thank the Neighborhood Dispute Resolution Center and mediators for their efforts to reduce conflicts between neighbors. This is even more necessary in the growing city of Pyeongtaek, so the city will strive to provide better support.”
Center Director So Tae-young said, “We are grateful to everyone who cooperated with the center this year, and we are working with the communication room and mediator teachers to resolve conflicts between neighbors, and we will continue to increase the value of life with greater resonance and meaning.” “I will do my best,” he said.
The Pyeongtaek City Neighborhood Dispute Resolution Center and its 10 communication rooms provide consultation to any Pyeongtaek citizen regarding issues that may arise between neighbors in daily life, such as noise between floors, pets, parking, water leaks, smoking between floors, littering, etc. (phone, face-to-face). Through reconciliation and mediation, we provide support so that the parties involved can meet in person and resolve fundamental issues through dialogue, and neighbors can have time to understand each other.
Meanwhile, Pyeongtaek City (Mayor Jeong Jang-seon) held the ‘Pyeongtaek City Landscape Resources Basic Survey Service Final Report’ at the City Hall General Situation Room on the 19th.
The briefing session was attended by a total of 30 people, including members of the Pyeongtaek City Council, expert advisors, and public officials from related departments, including the director of Pyeongtaek City’s Urban Housing Bureau. They shared the current status of the service, its results, and utilization plans, and expressed various opinions through Q&A and free discussion. Converged.
The purpose of this service was to systematically survey Pyeongtaek City’s landscape resources and reflect them in landscape plans to provide important basic data for establishing future landscape policies. In addition, emphasis was placed on strengthening Pyeongtaek City’s landscape administration by discovering, preserving, and expanding utilization of excellent landscapes.
A city official said, “We plan to secure Pyeongtaek City’s unique identity through the landscape resources surveyed this time and utilize them in a variety of fields.” He added, “We will empathize with citizens about the value of the landscape and create a unique landscape image of Pyeongtaek City through administrative efforts.” “I will spare no effort,” he said. He also emphasized, “We will share the results of this service with citizens to create an urban landscape that reflects the ‘ness of Pyeongtaek.’”
Pyeongtaek City plans to share various landscape resources to increase citizens’ understanding and empathy for landscape resources in the future and to actively reflect citizens’ opinions in the process of establishing landscape policies.
Economy Queen Reporter Kim Hong-mi / Photo Pyeongtaek City
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