
Tokyo's Minato Ward, home to nearly 22,000 foreign residents and the most embassies in Japan, is making a move that seems belated for such a cosmopolitan city: It is setting up its first administrative office to deal with the needs of foreign residents. It's not that the ward has failed to help foreign residents live comfortably; that work has been outsourced to an auxiliary group...But last year, the ward said it would stop providing subsidies to the association after fiscal 2008 as a cost-cutting measure...The ward initially considered divvying up the association's work among existing sections. However, staff and some assembly members warned that work sharing would be impossible. Yoko Watanabe, an official with Minato Ward's industry and regional promotion department, expressed concerns that the absence of a specialized entity could "send the wrong message that this ward is not committed to international affairs"...Watanabe noted that foreign residents "contribute roughly 20 percent of (the ward's) tax income," another reason to make the ward more accommodating to the international community...more...