Wuhan meeting daily needs of residents, vice-mayor says
The storage of daily necessities in Wuhan is generally sufficient to meet residents' demands during the city's lockdown, vice-mayor Xu Honglan said on Saturday.
Wuhan has also spared no effort to unclog the "last-mile" in logistics and delivery to ensure residents get what they need in their daily lives, Xu said.
The city government has recruited volunteers serving at communities and supermarkets to mitigate the shortage of delivery workers and increase delivery capacity, said Yao Bin, Party chief of Wuhan's commerce bureau.
"Community personnel and more than 20,000 volunteers were involved in the last 100-meter of the delivery to improve efficiency," Yao said.
He added that to build up the transportation capacity in the city, the government has taken over 800 buses, vehicles for express mail service and civil minibuses for the transportation between supermarkets and warehouses to communities.
"We've optimized the process of group purchase in communities to timely satisfy residents' needs of daily necessities," Yao said.
Li Guohan, director of Wuhan Civil Affairs Bureau, said every community has set up designated points to place daily supplies.
"Residents are guided in batches to pick up the supplies in different time periods," Li said.
Volunteers also help collect the needs of elderly people and disabled residents and help them buy necessary supplies, he added.
- Black-necked cranes return to Guizhou's Caohai reserve for winter
- Top political advisor calls for sound formulation of 2026 consultation plan
- What makes 'The Summit of Tianjin' special?
- Pharmacist jailed for falsifying test results, insurance fraud
- CPC holds symposium to commemorate 110th birth anniversary of Hu Yaobang
- Scientists design new coating for rare earth materials to glow when powered by electricity
































