From via don Giordi to the Simbirizzi area, up to Molentargius and via Pusceddu, in Quartu the scenario is always the same: heaps of waste of all types - in some cases even expanses of asbestos fragments - which widen day after day.

Small and large landfills that the administration of via Porcu is periodically forced to clean up, spending quite a few resources from the municipal budget: just under 40 thousand euros for the new reclamations that will start in these days, over 100 thousand if we consider all the money spent on average each year between the interventions foreseen in the contract with De Vizia and the extra ones.

"Useful resources that would have allowed us to provide services to the city, but which instead we are forced to use to clean up landfills caused by uncivilized people", comments the deputy mayor with responsibility for the Environment Tore Sanna. "And it is the citizens themselves who pay, the honest ones who do their duty and have to bear the costs of these scoundrels," stresses Sanna.

The planned reclamation map has almost one hundred and thirty landfills, distributed in eighteen different locations, complete with an eighteen-page photographic report defined by De Vizia a few weeks ago. At the top of the list is the hill of Pitz'e Serra, with sixteen spots in the area targeted by uncivilized people: mattresses, old household appliances, broken tires and heaps of rubble and building materials. The same situation along the Is Arenas municipal road, where someone - among other waste - has even abandoned a sofa, and in the area a stone's throw from Lake Simbirizzi.

Old televisions and plastic buckets in via don Giordi, expanses of waste bags in via Galvani and along the road of Forzorio. As well as in via degli Anthurium, in via Pusceddu, via Picci - on the border with Quartucciu -, in the Padre Attanasio area, and in the localities of Mar delle Antille and Niu Crobu highlighted in red due to the presence of asbestos. The areas subjected to reclamation also include that of Scoa Moentis-Su Pau, Sa Cora, via Cubeddu, Rio Cuba and Molentargius.

© Riproduzione riservata