Chapter 591: Signing the Lease Contract
"Student Jiang, I was wrong before; I didn’t trust you, and I want to apologize to you," said Captain Ma, bowing towards ngyu.
ngyu thought to herself, this captain is indeed straightforward.
Without waiting for ngyu to speak, Captain Ma continued: "Today we’re joined by all the production team leaders and core mbers of the teams. Since Student Jiang is also here, why don’t we take this opportunity to finalize and sign the contract now?"
ngyu naturally had no objections. dicine Valley, with its natural Spirit Gathering Array, was definitely sothing she wanted to secure.
Captain Ma, known for his decisive actions, took the chance to discuss the terms under which ngyu would lease Ghost Valley in front of all the team leaders, bringing out two contracts that ngyu had provided him with early on.
After imdiate discussion and consultation among the team leaders and key mbers, everyone unanimously agreed to lease Ghost Valley to Jiang ngyu for an annual price of one hundred yuan per mu.
Ma Da proposed a plan for the use of the lease paynts:
First, for brigade matters requiring the participation of cadres and the public, one yuan per day would be allocated as a subsidy.
Similarly, every cadre on duty at the brigade office and every production team leader attending etings there would receive a one yuan subsidy per day for work missed.
Second, instead of each household contributing money every month to provide each Five Guarantees household of each team with thirty kilos of rice, it will now be bought with the money from the lease contract.
Third, the funds originally supposed to co from every household for repairing the brigade’s junior high school departnt will now co out of the Ghost Valley lease paynts. In the future, the finances for repairing Jingshan Brigade’s primary and secondary schools will also initially co from these funds. If it’s not enough, then a coordinated contribution will be implented.
This plan seed to everyone to be fair and they naturally all raised their hands in agreent.
So, on the spot, the brigade leader and the team leaders all signed and affixed their thumbprints on the contract that ngyu had brought.
In reality, by conducting this thod, Captain Ma was already disregarding the secretary, but no one ntioned it.
Captain Ma then passed the contract signed by himself and the team leaders to ngyu.
After glancing at it, ngyu said, "Captain Ma, fellow team leaders, I have one more request."
Upon hearing that ngyu had another request, the crowd couldn’t help feeling anxious.
"Go ahead," said Captain Ma.
"I hope that each team leader can take turns bringing the contract back to their team so that every household head in their own team can sign it.
Of course, all the key mbers present at Ghost Valley should sign it first."
In her past life, she had heard that in the eighties, so people went to rural areas to lease land to plant various fruit trees.
When the ti ca for the trees to bear fruit, the local farrs did not recognize that they had leased out the land, thinking it was the village cadres who had taken the benefits from others to lease it.
As a result, the villagers went to the contracted orchard to pick the fruit grown through years of hard work by others and even collectively drove the leaseholders away.
The lessees, seeking the original production team leaders, found that the leaders had already been replaced, or had even gone out to work elsewhere, leaving the lessees’ years of effort and investnt to go to waste.
Therefore, she insisted that every household sign, so that even if the team leaders changed, it’s impossible that every household would change their head, right?
The crowd exchanged glances: "Isn’t that unnecessary?"
Doesn’t this an she doesn’t trust them?
Besides, if all the team leaders have signed, what else is there to worry about?
ngyu took a deep breath: "It’s not that I don’t trust you, but I’ve heard that so places have already started leasing to individual households, and by the end of this year or the beginning of next, it’s likely that the whole country will implent household-based contracting. By then—"
The brigade leader and the team leaders all pondered. If household contracting really beca a reality, then by that ti, their words as brigade and production team leaders might not even be heeded by anyone. Perhaps—
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