The regulation of public land concessions for premises in Cagliari must be rewritten. The entrepreneurs who join Fipe Confcommercio, who met together with the engineer Danilo Massa and the lawyer Nicola Ibba, are convinced of this. And they announced that a proposal will be ready to be brought to the attention of the Municipality by January.

The meeting was called after the case that exploded in Piazza San Domenico, in Villanova, where two businesses (Ninnos and Florio) had chairs and tables withdrawn for 18 months due to the violation, in two years, of the part of the regulation according to the which the music played inside must not also be heard outside, regardless of the volume. Sanctions that caused a stir, but not isolated cases.

«Today Cagliari has changed, tourist growth has contributed to the growth of our category, but at the same time it has brought out various critical issues» explains the president of Fipe Confcommercio Sud Sardegna Emanuele Frongia. «In all these years the dialogue with the administration has always been positive», he adds, «but today we realize that the time has come for a profound reflection on the future and on the rules that will regulate our activities in Cagliari».

The owners of the premises want to "think together about a regulation that educates, that plans, but that does not kill the activities", says Frongia. «We understand the need to regulate and re-establish the principle of legality», he underlines, «but the many sanctions today are not the thermometer of the presence of the administration and control, but rather they are the demonstration of how perhaps Palazzo Bacaredda has moved away from the real interpretation of the phenomena". Today, the entrepreneur's representative claims, "a business cannot be brought to economic death because of the music inside the venue".

Among the critical issues that also emerged was the management of separate waste collection: if on paper it led to greater cleanliness, on the other hand it shifted the burden of the service onto the operators, with employees forced to make long pilgrimages, bins in hand, sometimes with slaloms between customers, to reach the mobile ecological islands.

(Unioneonline/E.Fr.)

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