Compensation standard for demolition in Yingchengzi Town, Ganjingzi District, Dalian and whether the Measures for the Administration of Urban House Demolition in Dalian are applicable.

First of all, you need to get your hukou back, or go to the civil affairs department of Yingchengzi Town Government and ask if you are a farmer or a non-agricultural farmer (according to the new regulations issued by Liaoning Province this year, some farmers will soon be non-agricultural, which has not yet been implemented). If you still belong to farmers, then your house belongs to rural collective land after relocation, and building a house is illegal. Once the land is expropriated by the state, the house is a small property right and is not protected by law! This belongs to the village behavior, forced demolition and forced sale, selling the land to the developer, and then the developer sells the built building at a high price, and the profits are given to the village head and related village cadres, and the rest are owned by the developer.

The specific process is this: the developer took a fancy to the land in the village, so he found the village head and village director and handed over the prepared "benefit fee" to the village head. The village chief gave the director a third of the proceeds. When they saw the glistening money, they couldn't help it, so they handed over the land in the village to the developer and let the developer stay in Gai Lou. Developers use "not bad money" means to win over village cadres, and then there are the following people. Developers simply didn't put the people in the eye, thinking, I let you live in a building, how can you say it? I'll give you an extra 30-50 square meters per household, so keep your mouth shut. In this way, for each floor 1 1, villagers use one floor, and the remaining 10 floors are profitable. If the villagers don't agree, then demolish it. Three nail houses are nothing, and they are basically in place from top to bottom. I am not afraid of you! Finally, all the houses built in the village were sold. After living in 1 year, the local villagers found that the house was leaking, the wall was cracked, the height was not enough, and there were many quality problems. . . . . .

At this time, I found that the village chief already had several good houses in the city and rarely lived in the village, for fear that the house would "not hold up".

If you want to safeguard your rights, you must unite your strength. Now you don't know anything, so you can't just sign. In addition, you must know the truth from the Civil Affairs Office and ask the village chief that if you look for a cemetery or engage in infrastructure in the future, the state will requisition land. Do you own your house? Small property rights are not protected by law at all! If you have any questions, you can leave a message and I will work with you to find a solution!