Job Recruitment Website - Immigration policy - After the relocation of poor households, must the new house in my hometown be forcibly removed?

After the relocation of poor households, must the new house in my hometown be forcibly removed?

If the relocation is organized and implemented by the government, whether it is moving into a new house or giving housing resettlement subsidies, because the essence is housing replacement, the original old rural houses will be demolished. Although it does not belong to the scope of rural housing replacement, according to the regulation of "one household, one room", farmers must demolish houses, that is, only one household can be kept.

? The village collective receives the houses and homestead handed over by the relocated poor households. After the house demolition, the village committee is responsible for reorganizing the homestead into cultivated land for reclamation. Therefore, the main body of house demolition in the hometown of poor households is the village Committee, not the poor households, and there is no forced demolition, because the village Committee will demolish the houses in the hometown of poor households by itself. After the implementation of the village committee, the poverty alleviation departments at the township and county levels will organize personnel to go to the site to check whether the house is demolished and whether the house site is reclaimed after the house is demolished, which will also be included in the assessment scope of the village cadres' work. If the implementation is not good, it is the responsibility of the village cadres.

If the old houses of poor households are relatively new or connected, the things in the houses will be emptied and blocked. This is also a very humane measure, because the demolition of townhouses will affect the lives of other farmers. If the house is new, demolition is a waste, and blocking is a better way to deal with it. Generally speaking, the demolition of an old house or part of it is symbolic. In any case, there is no real estate registration for rural self-built houses. How many homesteads does a family have? People in the village don't say or know. Therefore, the new houses of "poor households" who should not be relocated for poverty alleviation will not be demolished.

? After relocation, poor households need to sign a relocation and retirement agreement. The agreement also clearly stipulates that the vacated homestead is the only homestead of poor rural households, and houses cannot be arbitrarily identified for demolition. As a poor household, the old house after relocation has been demolished, the old house base at the time of relocation has been recovered from the collective, and the demolished house will also issue a property certificate. According to the principle of "one household, one room", poor families can no longer apply for homestead. If there is no homestead, you can't build a house, because you must have a homestead to build a house. Even if I have money in the future, I can't build a house at home.