Vice Chairman of the Hai Phong People’s Committee Tran Van Quan has required thorough preparations for the groundbreaking of key projects in four communes within the former Gia Loc district.

Vice Chairman of the Hai Phong People’s Committee Tran Van Quan inspected the disbursement of public investment for several projects and the operation of the two-tier local government model in the former Gia Loc district on October 30.
During an on-site inspection of the National Highway 37 bypass project through the former Gia Loc township (connecting Thong Nhat bridge on National Highway 37 with Ring Road I), Quan commended the proactive implementation efforts by localities and relevant units.

The project has a total length of nearly 5.4 km, with a 3.911 km section passing through Gia Loc commune. The road is designed to be 34 m wide, requiring a land clearance area of 12.58 ha, including 0.43 ha of residential land. By June 30, Gia Loc commune had completed 95.9% of site clearance. Quan required the commune to accelerate the remaining workload to ensure timely completion.
He emphasized that local authorities must overcome difficulties, build on positive results, especially in handling administrative procedures for residents, speed up public investment disbursement, and complete site clearance in preparation for upcoming project groundbreakings at the end of 2025.

In Gia Loc commune, two major projects, the Lao Cai - Ha Noi - Hai Phong railway and the National Highway 37 bypass, require close coordination among departments and sectors to complete site clearance for hand over on schedule, and urge contractors to begin construction. The Western Hai Phong Construction Investment Project Management Board aims to commence nine projects before November 15, maintaining a high level of focus to meet deadlines.
Localities are also required to prepare for the groundbreaking ceremony of Hai Duong Nam Station on December 19 in accordance with the Prime Minister’s directive. In parallel, they should review and propose resettlement projects for the 2026 – 2030 period to ensure long-term plans align with overall zoning and related projects in the area.
PHONG TUYET