SHARE
COPY LINK

FLORENCE

Italian priest fined €2,000 for excessive bell-ringing

A priest in Florence whom neighbours claim has been ringing his parish bells more than 200 times a day has been fined and ordered to go easy on the chimes.

Don Leonardo Guerri from the Santa Maria a Coverciano church in the east of Florence has been feuding for four years with locals in what newspaper Corriere Fiorentino called “the war of the bells”.

Residents living nearby say the chimes rung every day between 8am and 9pm for years prevent them from working, relaxing or sleeping.

The worst comes on holidays, they say, when the bells peal every half hour.

After four years of petitions, legal proceedings and tests of noise pollution levels, the regional agency for environmental protection (ARPAT) in Tuscany decided to crack down, fining Guerri 2,000 euros ($2,225), the paper reported. 

The priest will still be able to ring the bells, but only for the call to Mass and the last service of the day at 6pm.

Contacted by AFP, the priest declined comment.

Faced with the growing number of bell tower disputes throughout Tuscany, the Archbishop of Florence, Cardinal Giuseppe Betori, sent a directive in 2014 to his diocese aimed at controlling noise levels.

He asked priests to “avoid straining the sense of Christian devotion” of local residents living close to bell towers with excessive ringing.

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.

ACCIDENT

Death toll at Florence building site rises to five

Rescue teams Saturday worked to recover the body of a fifth person killed by the collapse of a supermarket under construction in Florence, as the Tuscan city held a day of mourning.

Death toll at Florence building site rises to five

The region’s president Eugenio Giani said that the final death toll stood at five after Friday’s accident, which happened as workers were putting together prefabricated concrete structures.

“We can now say there are five dead, it’s a dramatic toll,” he told Italian media.

The bodies of three construction workers were found soon after the collapse, and the body of a fourth was recovered by firefighters working through the night.

Three workers were hospitalised, two of them in a serious but not life-threatening condition.

The accident took place at the site of a new Esselunga supermarket northwest of Florence’s main train station.

Photographs released by the firefighter service showed a beam which appeared to have snapped, bringing down other concrete slabs.

Pope Francis sent his condolences Saturday and called for “greater diligence from those responsible for protecting workers”.

Italy’s newspapers regularly carry stories of workers killed on the job.

Almost 800 deaths at work were recorded in Italy last year, according to official statistics — almost 90 percent of them men, and half aged over 50.

According to European Union statistics, Italy recorded 3.17 workplace deaths per 100,000 employed people, above the bloc-wide average of 2.23 but behind France (4.47) and Austria (3.44).

Across the EU, 22.5 percent of all fatal workplace accidents took place within the construction sector.

SHOW COMMENTS