Democratic Progressive Party presidential candidate Frank Hsieh (謝長廷) yesterday said the budget for the Sports Affairs Council should be increased to 1 percent of the government's total budget, currently about NT$16 billion.
Hsieh made the remarks at an event to launch a campaign group composed of athletes and arena managers, a Central News Agency (CNA) report said.
The CNA report also quoted Hsieh as saying that the ceiling for sports-related tax-free corporate donations should be raised and that 80 percent of a sports lottery to be launched soon should go to sports.
Hsieh, a former gymnast, said that he and presidential running partner Su Tseng-chang (
Hsieh said the sports council's current budget of NT$2.6 billion is low, adding that more money may not guarantee success, but too little money makes success impossible.
Hsieh said that the council's budget must not be misused and suggested it could fund water sports facilities in port cities around the nation as well as fund soccer fields, tennis courts and indoor track and field facilities.
A strong continental cold air mass and abundant moisture bringing snow to mountains 3,000m and higher over the past few days are a reminder that more than 60 years ago Taiwan had an outdoor ski resort that gradually disappeared in part due to climate change. On Oct. 24, 2021, the National Development Council posted a series of photographs on Facebook recounting the days when Taiwan had a ski resort on Hehuanshan (合歡山) in Nantou County. More than 60 years ago, when developing a branch of the Central Cross-Island Highway, the government discovered that Hehuanshan, with an elevation of more than 3,100m,
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TRANSPORT CONVENIENCE: The new ticket gates would accept a variety of mobile payment methods, and buses would be installed with QR code readers for ease of use New ticketing gates for the Taipei metro system are expected to begin service in October, allowing users to swipe with cellphones and select credit cards partnered with Taipei Rapid Transit Corp (TRTC), the company said on Tuesday. TRTC said its gates in use are experiencing difficulty due to their age, as they were first installed in 2007. Maintenance is increasingly expensive and challenging as the manufacturing of components is halted or becoming harder to find, the company said. Currently, the gates only accept EasyCard, iPass and electronic icash tickets, or one-time-use tickets purchased at kiosks, the company said. Since 2023, the company said it
China’s newest Type-076 amphibious assault ship has two strengths and weaknesses, wrote a Taiwanese defense expert, adding that further observations of its capabilities are warranted. Jiang Hsin-biao (江炘杓), an assistant researcher at the National Defense and Security Research, made the comments in a report recently published by the institute about the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) military and political development. China christened its new assault ship Sichuan in a ceremony on Dec. 27 last year at Shanghai’s Hudong Shipyard, China’s Xinhua news agency reported. “The vessel, described as the world’s largest amphibious assault ship by the [US think tank] Center for Strategic and International