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Why Italy is struggling to find ways to spend €200 billion in EU funds

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Why Italy is struggling to find ways to spend €200 billion in EU funds

“It’s mathematical. It’s scientific. Some initiatives gained’t be accomplished by 2026.” With these blunt phrases, Italy’s Minister for European Affairs Raffaele Fitto confirmed in late March what many in Rome and Brussels had been dreading for months.

Italy is certainly struggling to spend the €191 billion it secured from the European Union via the Restoration Fund, an unprecedented €672-billion programme launched in 2020 to assist member states get again on monitor after the COVID-19 pandemic.

Italy obtained the most important portion of these funds, however the nation is now operating behind because of its elephantine forms, restricted human assets, and a common administrative and political system unfit to handle such an unlimited activity.

A widely known drawback

Though extensively reported by the media and public spending watchdogs, Italy’s difficulties in managing the Restoration Fund’s assets turned plain on March 27. That is when the European Fee determined to postpone by a month the disbursement of the third installment of the plan, price €19 billion, as a way to have extra time to evaluate whether or not the nation glad all of the circumstances required to unlock the funds.

The next day, the Nationwide Court docket of Auditors printed its biannual progress report for the “Nationwide Restoration and Resilience Plan” (PNRR), the doc which particulars how Italy plans to spend the funds acquired from the EU, itemizing all of the scheduled reforms and investments.

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In line with the report, Italy has up to now spent €23 billion, simply over a 3rd of the €67 billion already acquired. 

That’s not sufficient: earlier estimates banked on the nation having spent at the least €40 billion by now, and the Court docket forecasted that on the finish of the yr, bills will stay €15 billion decrease than what was initially deliberate. 

In early February, Italy’s Minister for the Economic system and Finance Giancarlo Giorgetti stated that the nation would wish an additional yr to spend all the cash, suggesting it needs to be allowed to have till 2027 to finish the works. 

Since taking workplace final October, Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni has been speaking about the necessity to assessment the PNRR, inherited from the earlier authorities led by Mario Draghi, claiming that the excessive inflation charges and the implications of the struggle in Ukraine have modified the panorama in unexpected methods. Altering the phrases of the PNRR is technically doable, however it might require a brand new spherical of negotiations with European establishments.

Within the meantime, the clock retains ticking.

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Damaged forms

One of many predominant causes for the delays is the Italian bureaucratic equipment, whose infamously gradual and sophisticated procedures are unfit to handle such a lot of assets in such a short while.

Smaller municipalities are particularly struggling to maintain up with the calls for of the PNRR. 

“There’s a large hole between bigger cities, which may depend on extra assets, and small cities, whose administrative workplaces are sometimes understaffed and lack the technical abilities wanted to observe advanced initiatives,” Mario Conte, president of the Veneto department for the Nationwide Confederation of Native Authorities (Anci) and Mayor of Treviso, advised Euronews.

Moreover, “aside from the PNRR, native municipalities additionally have to attend to their day-to-day duties, which additionally demand a variety of effort and time,” Conte added. 

In lots of circumstances, the quantity of EU funds acquired by native municipalities is larger than their common annual price range. Treviso, as an illustration, normally manages €90 million per yr, and it ought to obtain a complete of €104 million from the PNRR: “We’re mainly doubling up our price range, however we nonetheless have the identical quantity of individuals to handle it,” Conte advised Euronews.

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Unable to maintain up with the tight deadlines and the bureaucratic procedures, some districts have already determined to forgo a part of the funds.

Castenaso, a 16,000-people city near Bologna, turned down a €4 million grant to construct a brand new facility for curler sports activities. “Once we utilized for the funds, we didn’t have an in depth venture,” Castenaso’s Mayor Carlo Gubellini advised Euronews. 

“After being chosen we studied the matter extra in-depth, and realised that the allotted funds weren’t sufficient and that the deadlines had been too tight.” Nevertheless, Castenaso is at the moment shifting ahead with a number of initiatives financed by the PNRR.

The problems, from stadiums to bushes

Aside from the difficulties skilled by smaller municipalities, Italy’s PNRR can be coping with technical issues on the next degree. 

Final month, the European Fee questioned the choice to allocate nearly €150 million to 2 sports activities initiatives: the renovation of the “Artemio Franchi” soccer Stadium in Florence, constructed within the Nineteen Thirties, and the constructing of a brand new sports activities centre in Venice. 

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In line with the Fee, these initiatives wouldn’t assist to enhance their respective areas and thus wouldn’t profit most people, an indispensable requirement for all of the initiatives funded via European cash.

The Florence stadium would have 40,000 seats and will price €194 million, €55 million of that are anticipated to return from the PNRR. The Venice sports activities centre would come with a 16,000-seats stadium, an area for indoor sports activities, and different social venues for a complete price of €283 million, a few third of which – €93.5 million – coming from the PNRR.

These initiatives weren’t included within the authentic model of the Plan introduced by Draghi’s authorities in 2021, however had been detailed in April 2022 as a part of the “Built-in City Plans,” an inventory of particular interventions to be carried out in Italy’s largest cities with assets from the Restoration Fund. In the mean time, the way forward for the 2 sports activities services in Florence and Venice stays unclear, and it’s doable that they are going to be excluded from EU-funded programmes.

Within the meantime, Rome and Brussels have additionally been quarreling over one other problem: bushes.

Italy allotted €330 million for planting 6.6 million bushes in 14 cities by 2024 via the PNRR, with 1.7 million by the top of 2022. The initiative is supposed to scale back air air pollution and enhance inexperienced areas in city settings, however planting thousands and thousands of bushes is proving to be simpler stated than achieved. 

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In a report launched final month, the Court docket of Auditors licensed a number of delays, highlighting that in lots of circumstances the “bushes” weren’t precise bushes however simply seeds in glasshouses, and that most of the bushes that had been planted are already withered.

The European Fee is at the moment gathering additional proof on Italy’s progress with the PNRR, and will quickly present updates concerning the disbursement of the third installment of the plan. 

This case appears to point out that it’s apparently simpler to acquire €191 billion from the European Union than truly spend it.

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US to require automatic emergency braking on new vehicles in 5 years and set performance standards

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US to require automatic emergency braking on new vehicles in 5 years and set performance standards

DETROIT (AP) — In the not-too-distant future, automatic emergency braking will have to come standard on all new passenger vehicles in the United States, a requirement that the government says will save hundreds of lives and prevent thousands of injuries every year.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration unveiled the final version of the new regulation on Monday and called it the most significant safety rule in the past two decades. It’s designed to prevent many rear-end and pedestrian collisions and reduce the roughly 40,000 traffic deaths that happen each year.

“We’re living through a crisis in roadway deaths,” Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said in an interview. “So we need to do something about it.”

It’s the U.S. government’s first attempt to regulate automated driving functions and is likely to help curb some of the problems that have surfaced with driver-assist and fully automated driving systems.

Although about 90% of new vehicles have the automatic braking standard now under a voluntary agreement with automakers, at present there are no performance requirements, so some systems are may not be that effective. The new regulations set standards for vehicles to automatically stop and avoid hitting other vehicles or pedestrians, even at night.

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“Part of how I think we’re going to turn the corner on the unacceptable level of roadway deaths that we just lived with for my entire lifetime is through these kinds of technologies,” said Buttigieg, who is 42. “We need to make sure we set high performance standards.”

The regulation, which will require additional engineering to bolster software and possibly add hardware such as radar, won’t go into effect for more than five years. That will give automakers time to bolster their systems during the normal model update cycle, NHTSA said.

It also will drive up prices, which NHTSA estimates at $354 million per year in 2020 dollars, or $82 per vehicle. But Buttigieg said it will save 362 lives per year, prevent about 24,000 injuries and save billions in property damage.

Critics say the standards should have come sooner, and that they don’t appear to require that the systems spot people on bicycles, scooters or other vulnerable people.

The new rule requires all passenger vehicles weighing 10,000 pounds (4,500 kilograms) or less to have forward collision warning, automatic emergency braking and pedestrian detection braking.

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The standards require vehicles to stop and avoid hitting a vehicle in front of them at speeds up to 62 miles per hour (100 kilometers per hour). Also they must apply the brakes automatically at up to 90 mph (145 kph) if a collision with vehicle ahead is imminent.

The systems also have to spot pedestrians during the day and night, and must stop and avoid a pedestrian at 31 mph to 40 mph (50 kph to 64 kph) depending on the pedestrian’s location and movement.

The agency said that in 2019, nearly 2.2 million rear-end crashes were reported to police nationwide, killing 1,798 people and injuring 574,000 others. Sixty percent of fatal rear-end crashes and 73% of injury crashes were on roads with speed limits of 60 mph (97 kph) or below.

In addition, there were 6,272 pedestrians killed in crashes, with 65% of those people being hit by the front of a passenger vehicle.

The vast majority of deaths, injuries and property damage happens at speeds above 25 mph (40 kph), speeds that are not covered by the voluntary agreement, the agency said.

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“Only regulation can ensure that all vehicles are equipped with AEB (automatic emergency braking) that meet minimum performance requirements,” the regulation says.

NHTSA would conduct random tests to determine whether automakers are meeting the standards.

The agency said it isn’t requiring what type of sensors each automaker must have to meet the requirements. That’s up to the automakers. But in testing of 17 vehicles, only one — a 2023 Toyota Corolla equipped with cameras and radar — met the standards.

The regulation said radar would have to be added to about 5% of the systems in order to comply with the requirements.

Cathy Chase, president of Advocates for Highway and Auto Safety, said the new standards will make it clear to car buyers that AEB will work properly. Most consumers, she said, are unaware that there are no requirements in place now.

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“By and large, it’s better to have AEB than not have AEB,” she said. “So once the AEB rule is put into place, once again the federal government will be doing its job and protecting consumers.”

NHTSA said it changed its original proposal, giving automakers more than five years to meet the standards instead of three. Chase said shorter would be better.

“The shorter the timeline, the more people are going to be saved, the quicker these are going to get into cars and our roadways are going to be safer for everyone,” she said.

Chase said she is not pleased that the rule does not appear to include standards for bicyclists or people using scooters.

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Funeral services are held for a Chicago police officer fatally shot while heading home from work

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Funeral services are held for a Chicago police officer fatally shot while heading home from work

Hundreds of mourners lined the streets Monday to say farewell to a Chicago police officer who was shot to death while off-duty and heading home from work.

Police officers, firefighters and others gathered along the funeral procession route to St. Rita of Cascia Shrine Chapel in Chicago to remember 30-year-old officer Luis M. Huesca. The six-year veteran of the police department was just two days shy of his 31st birthday when he was slain.

CHICAGO POLICE ID SUSPECT WANTED IN MURDER OF OFFICER LUIS HUESCA, OFFER $100K REWARD

Huesca was shot multiple times shortly before 3 a.m. on April 21 on the city’s Southwest Side. He was pronounced dead at a hospital.

The funeral program for Chicago police Officer Luis M. Huesca on April 29, 2024 at St. Rita of Cascia Shrine Chapel. Hundreds of mourners lined the streets to say farewell to the police officer who was shot to death while off-duty and heading home from work.  (Antonio Perez/Chicago Tribune via AP)

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Huesca was in uniform but wearing something on top of the uniform to cover it as is customary for off-duty officers, Superintendent Larry Snelling said.

Police have said that officers responded to a gunshot detection alert and found the officer outside with gunshot wounds. His vehicle was taken, but police have not confirmed whether the shooting was part of a carjacking.

An arrest warrant was issued last week for a 22-year-old man suspected in the shooting. The Associated Press is not naming the suspect because he has yet to be captured and arraigned.

Police have said the man should be considered armed and dangerous.

Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson’s schedule released Sunday night said he would attend Huesca’s funeral but an update sent to reporters Monday morning said he would not be present.

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The change came after Illinois Comptroller Susana Mendoza, a Democrat, said in an early Monday morning post on the social platform X that the officer’s mother asked Mendoza to tell Johnson he was “unwelcome” at the funeral. Mendoza said she and state Rep. Angelica Guerrero-Cuellar, also a Democrat, called Johnson on Sunday night to pass on the message.

“We continue to send our deepest condolences to the family and colleagues of Officer Luis Huesca as they heal from the loss of their beloved son, nephew, brother and friend,” Johnson said in a written statement Monday morning. “As mayor, I vow to continue supporting our police and first responders, uniting our city and remaining committed to working with everyone towards building a better, stronger, safer Chicago.”

Huesca was friends with Chicago police officer Andrés Vásquez Lasso who was slain in March 2023 during a shootout after responding to a domestic violence call. Huesca had honored Vásquez Lasso in a video.

Fellow officer Lucia Chavez said during Monday’s service that she was friends with Vásquez Lasso and Huesca.

“When we were at the academy, I remember … that during our training the instructor said ‘this uniform makes us family. If one fell, we all fell,’” Chavez said. “I didn’t understand that. Now, I do. I lost Andrés first. And now, Luis. I lost my two classmates, my best friends, my brothers. The violence in this city took them away from me, from us.”

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Snelling, the superintendent, said Huesca “left an impression.”

“He was always trying to leave things better than he found them,” Snelling said. “The protection of others is what he wanted every single day.”

Huesca was born in Chicago’s Avondale community. He earned his bachelor’s degree in business administration at the University of Illinois at Chicago, according to his obituary.

He is survived by his parents, Emiliano and Edith Huesca; a sister, Liliana O’Brien; and a brother, Emiliano Huesca Jr.

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Polish farmers suspend blockade of Ukraine border

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Polish farmers suspend blockade of Ukraine border

Polish farmers end blockade at the Ukraine border, after months of protests over cheap imports.

Polish farmers have called off their protest at the last border crossing with Ukraine, lifting a blockade that has dragged on for months, soured bilateral relations and buffeted Ukraine’s trade.

Truckers in Poland began blocking the border late last autumn, angered by what they said was Ukraine’s use of a wartime easing of border restrictions to win market share.

Farmers later joined their ranks, complaining about cheap Ukrainian food imports.

Polish farmers ended their blockade of the Rava-Ruska crossing on Monday morning, Ukraine’s border guard spokesman said, following months of diplomacy by Kyiv.

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“Fortunately, we have all directions on the border with Poland unblocked,” said Andriy Demchenko, the border official, adding that trucks were crossing in both directions. Poland’s border guard spokesman confirmed that comment.

Mykola Solskyi, Ukraine’s minister of agrarian policy and food, praised what he said was “constructive work” by Poland.

Ukraine’s daily average food exports by truck were up almost 20 percent on Monday compared with mid-April, said Taras Vysotsky, Solskyi’s first deputy.

Trucks carrying grain, the issue at the heart of the Polish-Ukrainian dispute, will still face checks on the Polish side, Kyiv officials said.

‘A thing of the past’

Ukraine’s ambassador to Poland, Vasyl Zvarych, said he believed the blockades were “a thing of the past”.

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However, Roman Kondrow, the leader of a local farmers’ organisation in the region bordering Ukraine, said protests could resume if needed, Polish news agency PAP reported.

Adrian Wawrzyniak, a spokesperson for the Solidarity farmers’ union, told the Reuters news agency the farmers were continuing talks with the government and planned a protest in Warsaw on May 10.

In an attempt to address the protesters’ demands, Poland decided this month to pay 2.1 billion zlotys ($522m) in subsidies to farmers to compensate them for low grain prices.

The protests drew sharp criticism from Ukraine during the winter, when protesters spilled grain from trucks and train carriages.

Warsaw and Kyiv have been engaged for months in talks at different levels to try to find a solution, with Ukraine calling on the European Union to intervene.

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Kyiv says its agricultural exports via Eastern Europe have not damaged EU markets, but that its trade has suffered from the protests. Ukraine has not published full data for its economic losses.

Ukraine is a major European grain producer. Talks on its agricultural sector are expected to be a central issue during its negotiations to join the EU.

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