250 students in quake-hit Japan city to evacuate
偽物ブランド take classes away from families January 16, 2024 (Mainichi Japan) Japanese version A man looks at a section of the Wajima Asaichi market that was destroyed by fire following the New Year's Day earthquake
ブランドコピー激安 with a grim face, in the city of Wajima, Ishikawa Prefecture
ブランドコピーバッグ on Jan. 14, 2024. (Mainichi/Kaho Kitayama) WAJIMA, Ishikawa -- A city government in quake-hit Ishikawa Prefecture on Jan. 15 announced it will evacuate some 250 local junior high school students by bus to two prefectural accommodation facilities in the neighboring city of Hakusan. Junior high school students in the Ishikawa Prefecture city of Wajima whose parents and guardians have expressed their support for the group evacuation will take classes and live away from their families for a maximum of about two months. All three municipal junior high schools in Wajima have been turned into evacuation centers following the Jan. 1 Noto Peninsula earthquake
ブランドコピー最高N級 and there is still no prospect of the resumption of classes. After the group evacuation, teachers from the three junior high schools will proceed with classes either in the accommodation facilities or at schools in the vicinity. Parents are expected to have the opportunity to meet directly with their children depending on the situation. A simplified procedure to allow students to transfer to schools outside of the city will be introduced so that they can return when classes resume in Wajima. Tadashi Ogawa, superintendent of the Wajima Municipal Board of Education, commented, "Considering their development
ブランドコピー品 junior high school students can endure about two months away from their parents. We want to create the best environment possible for the children." The prefectural city of Suzu and the town of Noto are also surveying the intentions of parents and guardians over the possible group evacuation of junior high school students from those areas. (Japanese original by Tsukamoto Kohei, Nagoya News Center) Font Size SML Print Go to The Mainichi Home Page Related Articles Some schools reopen and garbage collection resumes in Japan's areas hardest-hit by New Year's quake Quake-hit city in Japan mulls group evacuation of 400 junior high students Fears grow of disease outbreaks at evacuation centers after Japan's Noto quake