Shanghai municipal government has been inundated with thousands
of grievances from residents over the past few weeks, largely due
to a new complaint hotline set up in conjunction with one of
Shanghai's largest media groups.
More than 14,000 residents have used the bilingual service to
whine about obnoxious touts on the street, moan about property
management companies, and bellyache about noise pollution over the
past two weeks. That is about four times the number of complaints
the city's old hotline would expect to hear over a two-week
period.
The biggest source of complaints are people handing out flyers
and hawking goods to pedestrians along busy downtown streets, an
annoyance that accounted for almost 25 percent of grievances.
"It is the busiest period we have ever encountered," said Zhang
Rongsheng, deputy director of the 12319 hotline service center.
The government-backed 12319 hotline was recently linked to the
Wenhui-Xinming United Press Group. The press group's popular
hotline now passes on any complaints it receives to the government
call center. "We contact city watchdogs to investigate and solve
problems as soon as possible," Zhang said.
Complaints about property management companies are the second
most popular grievance, accounting for about 8 percent of calls,
followed by noise complaints, which make up 6 percent of
gripes.
The government-backed hotline 12319, which was officially
launched last July, provides 24-hour service to anyone who wants to
report problems. The center promises to provide feedback to callers
after they have dealt with a complaint, according to Zhang.
(Shanghai Daily July 27, 2006)