Job Recruitment Website - Immigration policy - Poverty alleviation relocation requires the demolition of old houses. What should I do if I don’t have a house?

Poverty alleviation relocation requires the demolition of old houses. What should I do if I don’t have a house?

After reading the question raised by the questioner, what I want to express is that the old house in the hometown must be demolished for poverty alleviation relocation. What should I do if there is no house in the hometown. Ali wants to say here that for poor households who choose to relocate for poverty alleviation, the local government departments will build houses in the town or county. After the poor households get the keys to the relocated houses, the old houses in their hometown will be relocated. Vacant, retreat and recycle, this is also the basic principle to be followed in relocation for poverty alleviation.

You can only choose between a relocated house or an old rural house. You cannot have both.

Many poor households said that they want poverty alleviation relocation housing because the relocation housing is in a good location and has convenient transportation. If it is in the county town, a relocation house is worth more than 200,000 to 300,000 yuan, and I only need You can get it for less than 10,000 yuan. But at the same time, poor households do not want to give up their old houses in their hometowns, because the countryside is their roots and their retreat. Having cut off their roots, they feel somewhat reluctant to let go. We ordinary people can understand this. However, poverty alleviation and relocation is a national-level policy and must follow the principles of "one house per household" and "vacate the old and house the new". One household, one house is the basic rural housing policy. If poor households are not only allocated poverty alleviation relocation housing in the city, but also do not repurchase their homes in their hometown, it violates "one household, one house" and will lose fairness, leaving other people behind. Why are thousands of ordinary people convinced? After all, the living standards of rural poor households and non-poor households are not too far apart. "One household, one house" is for all rural people, not some rural people.

For the relocated households whose old houses in their hometowns have been demolished, if they are young people, they can live with their parents when they return to the countryside. Moreover, after becoming parents for a hundred years, they can inherit their parents' house in the countryside. As long as the house doesn't fall down, you can always live in it. Similarly, if you are an elderly person and want to live in the countryside, you can also live in your son's rural house. Of course, in reality, not many elderly households relocate.

To sum up, new resettlement housing will be allocated for relocation, so poor households do not have to worry about having no house to live in. When it comes to demolishing old houses in hometowns, that is a policy, it is reasonable and reasonable, and all relocated households must abide by it. If you want to go back to your hometown occasionally, you can live with your relatives. Nowadays, the rural areas are seriously hollowed out, so you don't have to worry about having no place to live.

Poverty alleviation relocation usually involves registered poor households (only in rural areas). Their own rural houses have been appraised by an appraisal agency with housing appraisal qualifications and reported to the county-level housing and construction department for approval. It is a Class D dilapidated house. With the written application of the head of the poor household and the signature and consent of all the living persons (one household registration book), the poor household can apply to the township government for relocation for poverty alleviation and move into a resettlement house for free. The resettlement houses in this county have 4-5 floors, and there are also single-family courtyards with 1 floor. ***The per capita living population is 25 square meters, and all water and power grids are provided to each household. All you need to do is bring your bags and move in

At the same time, a written agreement for the reclamation of the original homestead must be signed.

During the implementation process, the county adopted the principle that the relocated households should stay in the resettlement site for more than 9 months, and after the Spring Festival in the resettlement site, they would begin to demolish the old houses on the original homesteads of the relocated households. , Reclamation.

Of course, in remote villages with inconvenient transportation, demolition progress is very fast; in places with relatively better conditions, progress is slower. Some relocated households have the idea of ????"sugar cane has sweetness at both ends". They want to live in spacious and bright new houses and keep their old houses (homesteads). All towns and villages in the county and villages in the same town have to carry out demolition and reclamation work. Progress has been uneven. Of course, there are also some relocated households who want to demolish their old houses at first sight, and there are also some who have given up their resettlement housing.

The subject of this question: The relocation and resettlement of poverty alleviation does not have a house itself (there is no house registered in the name of the head of the household and the person living with ***). After on-the-spot investigation at the village level, After applying to the County Poverty Alleviation Office, Housing and Urban-Rural Development Bureau and other units for approval, they can directly move into the resettlement housing.

As a “houseless household”, how can there be any old houses to demolish?

My grandpa was assigned to a relocation house!

Our poor households here can generally receive it, such as

households with five guarantees, or those whose families have no labor force, or those whose children have mental problems and are relatively old, etc. Everyone has been allocated a house

Actually, there is no need to worry about not being able to get a house if the house is demolished. The houses here have already been built! The requirement for moving in is that if you have a house you lived in before, it must be demolished before you can get the key to the new house. It seems that my grandpa also paid 7,000 yuan. Why he had to pay this money is not very clear. It seems that he has moved in. You can refund the 7,000 yuan! Why do we have to demolish the old house before we can be allocated a house? I heard from a leader in the village that this is clearly stipulated. I am worried that I will not get in after receiving the key, resulting in the vacant resettlement houses being wasted! That makes sense, my grandpa demolished his old house! The government also wants to go to the scene to take photos!

As for the size of the house, it depends on how many people there are in your family! One person, 30 square meters, I don’t remember the details, but it’s just one room, one living room, one kitchen and one bathroom, two means two rooms, three people means three rooms, all with only one floor, if there are four or five people in the family! It's two floors and has a balcony!

Whether it is a house for one person or a house for four or five people, they are all beautifully decorated, and the greening and street lights are also good! Where can we start developing projects now so that poor households can find jobs nearby! My father has always lamented that the Communist Party is indeed good! If you don’t have money, you’ll get subsistence allowances, if you don’t have a house, you’ll get a house! [呲呲][呲呲][呲呲]

Relocation and demolition are two aspects. Relocation is divided into flower arrangement relocation and whole village relocation. Moving to a place uniformly arranged by the government Centralized resettlement houses or dispersed resettlement houses that are self-settled will provide a subsidy of 25,000 yuan per person for registered poor people in centralized resettlement, a subsidy of 20,000 yuan per person for dispersed resettlement by oneself, and a subsidy of 12,000 yuan per person for non-poor people in centralized resettlement with poor people. . The entire village must be moved, and then the old houses are demolished, and subsidies are provided in three levels. Residential subsidy: After measuring the building area, if the first-class house is habitable and has complete facilities such as glass windows, the subsidy is 200 yuan/square meter. The second-class houses have living facilities but are not very complete, and receive a subsidy of 150 yuan/square meter. The third class is for those who have houses but can hardly live in them, and receive a subsidy of 100 yuan/square meter. Then there is an additional subsidy of 20 yuan/square meter for the yard area. In some places, trees, toilets, storage rooms, etc. in the courtyard are also subsidized separately, and the standards vary from place to place.

If you don’t have a house, you will only move to a new house without demolishing the old one, and you will not receive subsidies for the old house.

Through assistance and other channels, the relocated people can adopt different models such as working + planting (breeding) or self-employment, entrepreneurship, and enterprise promotion to get rid of poverty and become rich.

Information is shared, I’m waiting for you! I am a rural grassroots cadre. Are you willing to share the people's livelihood with me? < /p>

There are two types of off-site relocation: one is centralized resettlement for off-site relocation, which is planned and constructed uniformly by the government, and farmers move in directly. The second is relocation and scattered resettlement in other places, which means leaving the original foundation and building in a place with convenient transportation, accessible water and electricity, good environment, conducive to development, and approved by the land management department. No matter what the situation is, as long as you move into a new house, the old house must be demolished and the old homestead must be reclaimed and vacated. Of course, the government will also provide certain compensation according to policies and standards.

I think this is a relocation household for poverty alleviation in another place. What to do if there is no land in the future? What to do when you arrive in a big city? What to live on? What should I do if the old man can’t do his job? The country has no idea how to live in the city and how to survive.

For relocation and poverty alleviation, houses cannot be built on the old site. The state will help you build your house and will not demolish your old site. You can continue to live there, but the house will be owned by the collective economy of the village. Have you made the wrong policy? I suggest you check the policy again. Poverty alleviation through relocation does not necessarily require the demolition of the old site.

Situations like the question mentioned will not happen at all during relocation for poverty alleviation. In other words, if you do not have a house, you cannot enjoy relocation for poverty alleviation. On the contrary, you can enjoy relocation for poverty alleviation. According to the relocation policy for poverty alleviation, the old house must be demolished after moving to a new house.

Relocation for poverty alleviation must meet three conditions: 1. The relocation targets must be registered poor households; 2. The relocation targets must be voluntary; 3. The relocation targets must be residents of " "Where the land and water cannot support one person", the relocation areas are mainly rural poverty-stricken areas with harsh natural conditions, poor living environment, serious lack of development conditions and a relatively concentrated registered poor population.

The above three necessary conditions are indispensable. As you said, if you don't have a house, you don't meet the third condition, that is: "The relocation object must live in a place where the water and soil cannot support one person." Since you do not meet this condition, it means that you are not eligible. The relocation policy for poverty alleviation will not be implemented for you.

If you have enjoyed the relocation policy for poverty alleviation and have moved into a poverty alleviation resettlement house, it means that you are poor due to the poor living environment. If you are relocated for poverty alleviation, it will be It can solve your poverty problem caused by poor living environment, and at the same time improve your living conditions, which will help you get rid of poverty and become rich.

"Moving to new houses and demolishing old ones" is a basic policy for relocation for poverty alleviation. Before the implementation of relocation for poverty alleviation, the poor households will be informed of this policy. Only after the poor households agree will the policy be implemented. He was relocated for poverty alleviation, so he enjoyed the relocation policy for poverty alleviation. After moving into a new house, the reason why he said there was no house to demolish was not valid.

Of course, another situation is that in targeted poverty alleviation, some poor households do not have houses to live in. In order to solve their housing problems, more relocation resettlement houses will be built. Houses are provided to accommodate them, but this does not fall under the category of relocation for poverty alleviation, but belongs to the category of household security. Let us not get it wrong.

In summary, a situation like the one mentioned in the question will not exist in relocation for poverty alleviation because it does not meet the conditions for relocation. If it meets the conditions for relocation, After moving into a new house, the old house must be demolished and reclaimed.

It is a long journey to grow food and vegetables, which is extremely inconvenient for most of the elderly. The elderly are not allowed to die in the resettlement sites when they are sick. The old houses have been demolished and there is no room for them to die! The houses in the resettlement sites are small and there is no place to put agricultural tools in the old houses. Therefore, unequal demolition policies have emerged in rural areas. Those who do not want to be demolished still keep the old houses. Most of the resettlement houses are idle and only a few are close to their homes. The old houses are demolished and replaced. The problems encountered in the new centralized resettlement are worth thinking about.