12 Yeosu Industrial Complex Labor Unions Declare Support for Candidate Kim Dae-jung for Superintendent of Education
The Yeosu Industrial Complex Labor Union Council declared its support for Kim Dae-jung, the candidate for Jeonnam Superintendent of Education. Photo by Kim Dae-jung Election Office
View original image[Asia Economy Honam Reporting Headquarters Reporter Lee Jun-kyung] Twelve Yeosu Industrial Complex Labor Union Councils have declared their support for candidate Kim Dae-jung for Jeonnam Superintendent of Education.
According to Kim Dae-jung's election office on the 17th, the Yeosu Industrial Complex Labor Union Council signed a business agreement with candidate Kim Dae-jung at the DL Chemical labor union office in Yeosu Industrial Complex the previous afternoon and declared their support.
The council, consisting of 12 major Yeosu Industrial Complex company labor unions including DL Chemical, GS Caltex, Hanwha Solutions, Lotte Chemical, Huchems, Namhae Chemical, Lotte Advanced Materials, KRCC, Kumho Polychem, Kumho Mitsui, BASF, and Kumho P&B, stated, "We support candidate Kim Dae-jung for the development of education in the eastern Jeonnam region such as Yeosu and Suncheon."
Kim Kwang-yong, chairman of the Yeosu Industrial Complex Labor Union Council, along with 11 representatives of major company labor unions, declared their support, saying, "Only candidate Kim Dae-jung, who has proposed various pledges to improve high school students' academic performance, is the right person to normalize Jeonnam education."
They pledged, "To revive the crisis-stricken Jeonnam education, candidate Kim Dae-jung, who has experience in education, administration, and politics, must be elected as superintendent of education. For this, the Yeosu Industrial Complex labor union members will unite."
Candidate Kim Dae-jung and the Yeosu Industrial Complex Labor Union Council agreed on establishing a special student support center for experiential classes and vocational education, expanding the Yeosu Yongchang Elementary School facilities, and operating a cultural and artistic environment experiential learning center with parents.
This learning center will provide simultaneous experiences with flora and fauna and opportunities for student-led performance culture.
Both parties also agreed on special support for public and private general high schools to improve academic performance and prevent student outflow, establishing an education system linked with local governments, and reorganizing departments for customized workforce training.
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Additionally, they signed an agreement to alleviate commuting inconveniences between old and new downtown areas through school relocation and expansion, expand joint school districts, and strive to prevent population outflow and stabilize living by reviving the eight-year designation of education superintendent schools.
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