In a move to increase pregnancy safety, a badge to help people recognize pregnant women will be available at designated hospitals starting this month, the Taipei City Government said at a press conference yesterday.
The badge, depicting a woman’s large abdomen in silhouette and the slogan: “Please yield your seat, best wishes during pregnancy,” is a new initiative by the city’s Department of Health to enable people to identify women in the initial stages of pregnancy and offer them seats on public transportation.
Yu Li-hui (游麗惠), chief of the department’s health promotion division, said that since mothers in early pregnancy don’t have protruding abdomens, people on buses assume they should not take priority seats.
“There was one case where the mother was driven from a priority seat by someone poking her with an umbrella,” Yu said.
Yu said mothers in Taipei could obtain the badge from obstetrics and gynecology clinics where they go for regular pregnancy check-ups. With the launch of this new measure, people will be able to offer their seats to those with pregnancy badges without hesitation, Yu said.
Four factors led to the declaration of a typhoon day and the cancelation of classes yesterday, Taipei Mayor Chiang Wan-an (蔣萬安) said. Work and classes were canceled across Taiwan yesterday as Typhoon Krathon was forecast to make landfall in the southern part of the country. However, northern Taiwan had only heavy winds during the day and rain in the evening, leading some to criticize the cancelation. Speaking at a Taipei City Council meeting yesterday, Chiang said the decision was made due to the possibility of landslides and other problems in mountainous areas, the need to avoid a potentially dangerous commute for those
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SEMICONDUCTORS: TSMC is able to produce 2-nanometer chips and mass production is expected to be launched by next year, the company said In leading-edge semiconductor manufacturing China is behind Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC) by at least 10 years as the Taiwanese chipmaker’s manufacturing process has progressed to 2 nanometers, National Science and Technology Council (NSTC) Minister Wu Cheng-wen (吳誠文) said yesterday. Wu made the remarks during a meeting of the Legislative Yuan’s Education and Culture Committee when asked by Democratic Progressive Party Legislator Wu Pei-yi (吳沛憶) about a report published in August by the Chinese version of Nikkei Asia that said Taiwan’s lead over China in chip manufacturing was only three years. She asked Wu Cheng-wen if the report was an accurate
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