Gyeonggi-do Conducts Joint Inspections for Disaster Prevention at Water Parks and More View original image


[Asia Economy (Suwon) = Reporter Lee Young-gyu] Gyeonggi Province is launching a joint inspection to prevent disaster accidents at water parks and other facilities within the province.


The Gyeonggi Province Special Safety Inspection Team announced on the 8th that, in preparation for the vacation season, it will conduct joint inspections with city and county offices and fire stations from the 12th to the 28th to prevent disaster accidents at amusement facilities (water parks) and swimming pools.


The inspection targets are 5 out of 24 amusement facilities (water parks) and 5 out of 14 swimming pools in the province. The inspections will be conducted sequentially based on size and disaster risk priority to check the status of joint safety management.


Additionally, the inspections will focus on safety management for disaster prevention by identifying risk factors through on-site inspections and proposing solutions to resolve them.


The inspection items include ▲ management (operation) status of sodium hypochlorite, polymer coagulants, Material Safety Data Sheets (MSDS), safety education, and fire alarm control panels ▲ deformation and cracks in major structural parts and finishing materials, ground subsidence, and crack occurrence ▲ safety management of electric shock risk factors, checking for overloaded wires and deterioration ▲ management and operation status of organic equipment electric devices, pumps, and welded parts ▲ whether electronic entry logs (QR codes) or manual logs are maintained, availability of quarantine supplies (thermometers, masks, hand sanitizers, etc.), regular disinfection, and indoor ventilation.



Park Won-seok, Director of the Safety Management Office of the province, emphasized, "To prevent safety accidents in advance, we will not only conduct inspections in preparation for the vacation season but also continuously carry out on-site safety inspections of various facilities vulnerable to disasters such as typhoons, small-scale vulnerable facilities, suspension bridges, and winter season, striving to protect the lives and safety of residents."


This content was produced with the assistance of AI translation services.

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