Skip to content

JOBUZO

  • News
  • Indonesia
  • Toggle search form
Government aims to shorten long lines at women's restrooms

Government aims to shorten long lines at women’s restrooms

Posted on 20 August 2025 By jobuzo

The Japanese government plans to take steps to shorten long waiting lines at women’s restrooms in fiscal 2026, according to a report.

In the year from next April, the infrastructure ministry will compile advanced solutions to congestion in women’s rooms already in place at train stations and commercial facilities and drive the broad adoption of those measures in line with its proposal last month.

Under a budgeted program, it specifically aims to collect such successful cases as floor-by-floor digital vacancy signage and event venue bathrooms with variable walls that can satisfy demand from female visitors in cooperation with other relevant ministries.

Women’s restrooms tend to see long lines due to their fewer toilets and longer use times, compared with men’s rooms.

At a government meeting in July, the ministry also proposed to review the standard number of toilets per restroom and urgently urge builders of makeshift toilet facilities to flexibly cope with various situations.

Currently, there are guidelines on the number of toilets at public restrooms set by the health ministry and recommended by academics, respectively.

News :<div>12 weeks' jail for school IT support technician who took upskirt videos of teachers</div>

The infrastructure ministry is expected to launch a conference of parties concerned as early as September to create a single, non-binding guideline by March 2027, people familiar with the matter said.

Government aims to shorten long lines at women’s restrooms


News

Post navigation

Previous Post: Samsung Galaxy Tab S11 Ultra: All the Specs You Need to See
Next Post: Australia’s Albanese downplays Netanyahu’s criticism as ties sour

Related Posts

Donald Trump ‘had a problem' with France, Macron: Here's why Donald Trump ‘had a problem’ with France, Macron: Here’s why News
Australia's social media ban for children takes effect in world first Australia’s social media ban for children takes effect in world first News
101 people missing after submarine attack on Iranian warship off Sri Lanka 101 people missing after submarine attack on Iranian warship off Sri Lanka News

Latest

  • South Korean province sets up teacher protection agency inspired by Netflix hit ‘Teach You a Lesson’
  • Daily roundup: 31 oversubscribed primary schools in Phase 2A to conduct balloting — and other top stories today
  • Let This Be Your Easy Guide to What the Easy A Cast Is Up to Now
  • Ultrahuman’s former hardware VP raises $5.5M for devices that control AI agents, not just record you
  • Meta now alerts parents if their teen discussed suicide or self-harm with its AI chatbot
  • Tensions spur ultra-rich to diversify across Asia
  • China memory-chip maker CXMT set for mega IPO
  • Merz says U.S. should not interfere in German elections
  • Trump resumes Iran’s naval blockade, threatens strikes on power plants
  • Kenya’s car market evolves despite high import taxes

Copyright © 2025 JOBUZO. Disclaimers | Privacy Policies

Powered by PressBook Masonry Blogs