Chinese Cities Turn to GPS Technology to Limit Personal Use of Government Cars

By Guo Wei
Published: 2011-02-11

 

The use of government cars by officials for personal use has long been a source of public dissatisfaction.

Zhejiang's Songyang County has introduced a new high-tech solution aimed at curbing mis-use of government vehicles. The county plans to install GPS in official cars in order to monitor their use.

According to a report in the People's Daily, with just one click of their mouse, officials in the county's Commission for Discipline Inspection will be able to check the position of the entire fleet of 439 official cars.

Songyang county is not the first jurisdiction to introduce such measures, according to a report in the Southern Daily in late January, the  Guangzhou Municipal Government also has plans to introduce a similar system to monitor official car use.

While Changsha, the capital of Hunan province, introduced similar measures back in 2009, though the project there was especially aimed at monitoring vehicles such as garbage trucks and various emergency and law enforcement vehicles.

According to an unnamed representative of the Songyang County Commission for Discipline Inspection, the new measures have proven very effective so far.

Li Tinggui (李廷貴), the director of Guangzhou's City Urban Administrative and Law Enforcement Bureau, the officers of which are commonly known as Chengguan, said that "within my work department, mine was the first car to be fitted with a GPS."

He went on to note that "with the GPS installed, you can still go to the place you should go, but you can't go where you're not supposed to go, there's no question of it being inconvenient."

Links and Sources

People's Daily: 浙江松陽:公車GPS監(jiān)管 遏制“車輪腐敗”
Southern Daily: 廣州市管干部用車節(jié)后加裝GPS和身份識別
Xinmin: 公車私用強(qiáng)制熄火 長沙芙蓉區(qū)城管給88臺公用車裝GPS
Image: Southern Daily