The Executive Yuan on Friday approved a six-station Mass Rapid Transit (MRT) line from Taipei’s Donghu (東湖) area to New Taipei City’s Sijhih District (汐止) in an effort to ease traffic congestion on roads heading to Keelung from the greater Taipei area.
The Executive Yuan is setting aside NT$27.84 billion (US$916.18 million) to fund the project, Premier Su Tseng-chang (蘇貞昌) said.
The new line should lessen traffic in Sijhih District and connect to another planned line in Keelung, which is expected to begin construction later this year, according to the New Taipei City Department of Rapid Transit Systems.
Photo courtesy of New Taipei City Government’s Department of Rapid Transit Systems
The department is ready to begin designing and planning the route, Construction Division Deputy Director-General Chen Chih-ming (鄭智銘) said.
Funding challenges are expected, and securing deals with companies that have urban construction experience could be difficult, as many are occupied with other projects, Chen said.
New Taipei City is to focus on planning and administration of the project until bidding takes place, at which time contractors might have openings in their schedules, he added.
The department also urged the Executive Yuan to expedite approval of construction efforts for the Keelung and Minsheng-Sijhih MRT lines, which would connect Keelung, New Taipei City and Taipei.
The department said that the Donghu-Sijhih MRT line is expected to cost NT$37.69 billion.
Although Keelung is expected to shoulder NT$9.8 billion of the total cost as per a standing agreement, the central government agreed that the same amount would be deferred, with New Taipei City shouldering NT$22.05 billion, while the central government subsidizes NT$5.76 billion, the department said.
New Taipei City Mayor Hou You-yi (侯友宜) on Friday wrote on Facebook that the municipality is ready to realize the expectations of Sijhih residents after two decades, and that New Taipei City is working with the central government to bring about prosperity for the greater Taipei region.
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
There are 77 incidents of Taiwanese travelers going missing in China between January last year and last month, the Straits Exchange Foundation (SEF) said. More than 40 remain unreachable, SEF Secretary-General Luo Wen-jia (羅文嘉) said on Friday. Most of the reachable people in the more than 30 other incidents were allegedly involved in fraud, while some had disappeared for personal reasons, Luo said. One of these people is Kuo Yu-hsuan (郭宇軒), a 22-year-old Taiwanese man from Kaohsiung who went missing while visiting China in August. China’s Taiwan Affairs Office last month said in a news statement that he was under investigation
PRO-CHINA SLOGANS: Two DPP members criticized police officers’ lack of action at the scene, saying that law enforcement authorities should investigate the incident Chinese tourists allegedly interrupted a protest in Taipei on Tuesday held by Hong Kongers, knocked down several flags and shouted: “Taiwan and Hong Kong belong to China.” Hong Kong democracy activists were holding a demonstration as Tuesday was China’s National Day. A video posted online by civic group Hong Kong Outlanders shows a couple, who are allegedly Chinese, during the demonstration. “Today is China’s National Day, and I won’t allow the displaying of these flags,” the male yells in the video before pushing some demonstrators and knocking down a few flagpoles. Radio Free Asia reported that some of the demonstrators
China is attempting to subsume Taiwanese culture under Chinese culture by promulgating legislation on preserving documents on ties between the Minnan region and Taiwan, a Taiwanese academic said yesterday. China on Tuesday enforced the Fujian Province Minnan and Taiwan Document Protection Act to counter Taiwanese cultural independence with historical evidence that would root out misleading claims, Chinese-language media outlet Straits Today reported yesterday. The act is “China’s first ad hoc local regulations in the cultural field that involve Taiwan and is a concrete step toward implementing the integrated development demonstration zone,” Fujian Provincial Archives deputy director Ma Jun-fan (馬俊凡) said. The documents