A new rule bars new entertainment venues from opening near 
residential buildings and schools to avoid possible public disturbances, 
according to a notice by the Ministry of Culture.
The notice, issued on 
Friday as a supplement to the Regulation on the Administration of Entertainment 
Venues, which took effect on March 1, also makes it clear that such businesses 
are not allowed to operate in museums, libraries, cultural sites, two or more 
levels underground or in public places such as railway stations and 
airports.
Areas near schools, hospitals and government offices are also 
off limits to new entertainment venues, which the notice defines as KTVs, 
ballrooms, nightclubs and arcade game halls. Bars and Internet cafes are not 
included.
Zhang Xinjian, deputy director of the Culture Ministry's 
culture market department, said earlier this year that the ministry had received 
many noise complaints involving entertainment venues and would issue regulations 
to reduce such disturbances.
The notice posted on Friday leaves it up to 
local governments to set a specific minimum distance between entertainment 
venues and schools, hospitals and government offices.
However, the 
notice does say that distances between entertainment venues and storage depots 
for hazardous materials are subject to the Regulation on the Safety Control of Dangerous Chemicals, which 
says such storehouses must be away from crowded public places, though it 
also fails to set specific distances.
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