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THE WEEK IN SWITZERLAND

Five big news stories from Switzerland you need to know about this week

Preparing Zurich to accommodate 2 million residents, and latest efforts to legalise cannabis, are among the Swiss news The Local reported this week. You can catch up on everything in this weekly roundup.

Five big news stories from Switzerland you need to know about this week
Can this city accommodate 2 million people? Photo by Thimo Pedersen on Unsplash

Growth spurt: Zurich’s population to reach 2 million

Fuelled mostly by immigration, Zurich’s population is expected to increase by around 450,000 people within the next two decades — from the current 1.6 million to 2 million — a rise that is “significantly higher than the Swiss average.”

Authorities are therefore devising plans to make the city and canton liveable for new residents.

They are doing this by ensuring that Zurich’s infrastructure, such as housing, public transport, as well as school and healthcare systems, will but be able to function optimally, both from the logistical and financial point of view. 

READ ALSO: What Zurich needs to do to accommodate 2 million residents 

Moves toward legalising cannabis use are underway

A new citizens’ initiative is seeking to legalise the possession, cultivation, and sale of the drug in Switzerland.

“Legalising cannabis: an opportunity for the economy, health and equality” also calls for revenues from the taxation of cannabis products to be allocated to drug prevention as well as a campaign by the government to highlight the health risks of cannabis.

The organisers have 18 months – until October 2025 – to collect the 100,000 signatures required for a popular initiative to brought to the ballot box on a national level.

READ ALSO: Switzerland could vote again on legalising cannabis 

Bolt breaks Uber’s monopoly on ride hailing in Zurich

The Estonian company is starting this service, promising cheaper fares than their global rival, Uber,and  stating that they take a 20 percent cut from each ride, in comparison to Uber’s 25 percent. 

As with Uber, users pay per kilometre travelled, with increased charges for peak or ‘surge periods’. 

Also, like Uber and other ride-hailing services, rides with Bolt are booked and paid for via a smartphone app, available for Android and Apple phones.

READ ALSO: Ride-hailing service Bolt to challenge Uber in Zurich 

Politicians propose ways to cut health insurance costs

On June 9th, the Swiss will cast their votes on two issues aiming, though in different ways, to curb the continually increasing cost of the obligatory health insurance (KVG / LaMal).

In the meantime, however, Switzerland’s main political parties have proposed solutions of their own to tackle the cost problem.

They range from having the government-run, rather than private, healthcare and premiums tied to income, to abolishing healthcare insurance altogether.

READ ALSO: How Switzerland’s political parties want to curb surge in health costs 

Sustainable transport organisation opposed motorway expansion

Switzerland’s advocacy body for sustainable transport policy, VCS, is launching the ‘Stop Motorway Expansion Alliance’ that seeks to block the widening of existing motorways and the building of new ones in various parts of the country..

“The VCS referendum against the motorway expansion is an opportunity to send a groundbreaking signal against the current wrong path and for a more sustainable, responsible transport policy,” the group said.

It is also lobbying for  a maximum speed limit of 30 kilometres an hour in residential areas, and supports investment in the public transport network.

READ ALSO: How Switzerland can improve road and rail transport 
 
And also…

Swiss  tourism board  switches to a new logo

The country’s tourism board changed into 30-year-old logo to reflect even more ‘Swissness’.

The edelweiss flower is out and the Swiss flag is in… replacing the ‘t’ letter in ‘Switzerland.’

READ ALSO: Swiss tourism body unveils its new logo

Now, at last, nobody will confuse Switzerland with Sweden.

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For members

THE WEEK IN SWITZERLAND

Six big news stories from Switzerland you need to know about this week

The slowness of Switzerland's trains and salaries of foreign workers are among the Swiss news The Local reported this week. You can catch up on everything in this weekly roundup.

Six big news stories from Switzerland you need to know about this week

Swiss trains are on time, but slowly

Although Switzerland has a punctual and efficient train system, it is also the slowest in Europe.

The existing infrastructure is not adapted to faster trains, because it is not a top priority for the national railway company (SBB) or the Federal Office of Transport, both of which favour reliability and quality of service over speed.

They also prefer to focus on developing a dense network; this means trains can’t travel fast as they have to make frequent stops at all stations.

READ ALSO: Why are Swiss trains the slowest in Europe?

Are foreign workers in Switzerland underpaid?

Many people think so, but it turns out that highly-qualified foreign nationals employed in managerial roles not only earn as much as their Swiss counterparts, but sometimes even more.
 
This is what emerges from an analysis of data released by the Federal Statistical Office.

It indicates that wages of  B, C, and G-permit holders often exceed those earned by Swiss citizens employed in equivalent positions.

READ ALSO: In which jobs in Switzerland do foreign workers earn more than the Swiss?

Could Switzerland be ready to recognise non-binary status?

Switzerland recognises only two genders: male and female.

But what about people who don’t identify as either?

After a non-binary person, Nemo, who is from Switzerland, won the Eurovision Song Contest last weekend, questions  are arising about the country’s readiness to start registering a third gender in the civil status register.

Such a change, however, would require numerous adaptations of the Constitution, as well as federal and cantonal laws.

READ ALSO: Could Switzerland officially recognise a third gender status?

Knife attack leaves several injured 

A 43-year-old Spaniard, attacked people on the streets of Zofingen with several knives on Wednesday night before being arrested.

In a statement, the public prosecutor’s office for the canton of Aargau said the man “probably inflicted wounds on himself and, according to initial findings, displays abnormal psychological behaviour.”

Prosecutors added that there was “no evidence of a terrorist motive” and that an investigation “for multiple attempted murders” was opened.

Armed with “sharpened or pointed” metal weapons, the attacker first lashed out at a passer-by at the railway station in the town of 12,000 people, about 60 kilometres (38 miles) west of Zurich, police said.

He then wounded several people seemingly at random before entering a house, police added.

READ ALSO: Man wounds six in knife attacks in Swiss town

Health insurance may pay for glasses and contact lenses

Right now, some complementary plans cover part of the cost of eyeglasses, but the obligatory insurance (KVG / LaMAL) doesn’t.

However, a parliamentary motion seeks to change that.

“The purpose of compulsory health insurance is to provide the services you need to get or stay healthy,” said Green Party MP Katharina Prelicz-Huber.”

This issue will be debated during the summer session to begin on May 27, but it already faces some ipposition from a right-wing Swiss People Party,  which argues that “if we seriously want to slow down the burdensome and constantly rising health costs for the benefit of the population, we [must] show the political will not to constantly expand the benefits of compulsory health insurance.”

READ ALSO: Could glasses and contact lenses soon be covered by Swiss health insurance?
 
Where in Switzerland do the motorists need to play toll?

While the motorway vignette replaces the obligation to pay toll on most Switzerland’s roads, a few Alpine tunnels still require drivers to pay a fee.

However, despite some recent media speculation, the Federal Council has opposed the idea of introducing further tolls on the Gotthard and San Bernardino tunnels, since both are public roads already funded by taxpayers’ money.

Instead, other strategies are currently being explored to combat the ongoing problem of traffic congestion o those much-frequented roads.

READ ALSO: The roads and tunnels in Switzerland where drivers need to pay a toll 

And also:

If you are a fan of J.R.R. Tolken’s “Lord of the Rings,” you may be interested to know it was inspired by the author’s visit, in 1911, to a village of Lauterbrunnen in the Bernese Oberland.

Tourists are still swarming the picturesque village, which prompted local officials to suggest imposing ‘entry fee’ ranging from 5 to 10 francs on visitors arriving by car:

READ ALSO: Stunning Swiss village plans to charge visitors to experience ‘Middle Earth

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