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some cases, lodging is provided when an employee is 'dispatched' to another area, but the agencies affiliated with the Nuclear Safety and Security Commission that sent the employee from Daejeon to Seoul subsidize the cost of Gangnam Apgujeong apartments and high-end officetels that exceed the usual standards. It turned out that it came.



Reporter Lee Hyun-young covered the story.



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In 2011, an employee of the Daejeon Korea Institute of Nuclear Safety and Technology, dispatched to the Seoul Nuclear Safety Commission, signed a global contract for an 84-square-meter apartment.



A dispatched employee received Jeonse money and lived in an apartment in Apgujeong, Gangnam, Seoul, where the rent was higher than in other areas of Seoul until 2012.



[Nearby real estate officials: After Daechi-dong, there is a little preference.

Because there is a name value.]



In 2013, the accommodation for dispatched employees was 400 million won in Jeonse, 50% higher than the average rent in Seoul at the time, Gangnam Yeoksam Raemian Apartment and Yongsan-gu Ichon-dong Gangchon Apartment. I live in an officetel in Jongno-gu.



Another agency, the Atomic Energy Control Technology Institute, is using a high-end officetel in Yongsan-gu, where the monthly rent is 1.8 million won.



This amount far exceeds the maximum of 600,000 won per month for single households and 900,000 won per month for family members, which is the maximum standard for housing subsidies under the general civil servant appointment rules.



Since the dispatched employees of the two institutions are classified as public institution employees, they were able to contract as they wanted without being subject to civil servant standards.



The organizations explained, "We considered the convenience of employees dispatched from Daejeon to Seoul."



[Yoon Doo-hyun / People's Power Rep.: It is an absurdly large amount that greatly deviates from the government guidelines.

There is an urgent need to improve this support standard at the level of the NSSC.]



As SBS coverage began, the two organizations said they would consider ways to improve it.



(Video coverage: Kim Hak-mo, Yang Doo-won, video editing: Kim Jin-won)