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LIVING IN FRANCE

Banning insects to abolishing ‘le’ and ‘la’ – The changes that readers would make to France

After hearing that a French mayor passed a bylaw banning summer rain, we started to think about the one change we would make to France if we were ever to be given unlimited power. From French language rules to café opening, here's what readers of The Local would change.

Banning insects to abolishing 'le' and 'la' - The changes that readers would make to France
Mosquitoes were high on the list of things people wanted banning in France. Photo by PATRICK KOVARIK / AFP

It all started with Daniel Marriere, the mayor of a small village in Normandy called Coulonces.

Fed up with the unusually wet and cool summer, he and his council passed a bylaw stating: “It is hereby ordered that for… the months of August, September and why not October, rain should stop and be replaced by bright sun and a light breeze.”

It’s possible that he might have some trouble enforcing that bylaw, but it got us thinking about the one change we would make to France, given the opportunity.

So we decided to throw open the question to readers of The Local France – the rules were simple; you had unlimited power to legislate over everything – up to and including the weather and other natural phenomena – but you could only change one thing.

Here’s what readers suggested; 

French language

Most readers of The Local (and its authors if we’re being honest) are at various stages of the struggle to learn French, so unsurprisingly a few people suggested some revisions to make the language easier.

Martin Pickford in Strasbourg said: “I only became a French national by taking the citizenship of my French wife after the vote for Brexit in the UK where we lived until 2019. After much study I managed to improve my French enough to pass the tests and became a French citizen at that time and we have been happily living in Strasbourg ever since.

“My French has improved a lot but for the life of me I still cannot work out why the language continues to use masculine and feminine gender for all nouns. There is no rule as to which should be used and I gave up trying when I realised that it was le bœuf and la viande.

“I would stop the use of Le and La immediately.”

READ ALSO The simple trick to allow you to get the gender of French nouns (mostly) right

Plenty of people would doubtless be grateful for such a change, but Janet Keating in Landes really embraced the omnipotence offered.

“Were I to have unlimited power, I would decree that the soil in France absolutely must make you 100 percent fluent in the language simply by walking on it,” she said.

Paperwork 

French bureaucracy is notorious so it’s perhaps unsurprising that several people mentioned it with some calling for a total ban.

Krystyna in Francoville was more moderate, suggesting: “Abolish paper forms and have absolutely everything online.”

There’s still some way to go, but French bureaucracy is gradually moving online with processes including visas, residency cards, applying for French citizenship and tax admin now done online.

7 handy shortcuts for French admin

There’s also a host of everyday actions, from booking a train or a doctor’s appointment to getting tickets for the Metro or even the Paris Olympics that are dématérialisé (virtual).

Meanwhile Will in Aude wanted only one thing – a digital nomad visa.

Cleanliness

France is a beautiful country but visitors often remark that the French themselves don’t seem to be that invested in keeping it that way, with littering and fly-tipping a regular occurrence as well as the notorious reluctance of (some) dog owners to pick up after their pets.

Heather, who lives on a canal boat currently heading through northern France, said: “I would have all dog owners pick up after their pets. No ‘land mines’!” and Marie Burns said: “I would make owners of dogs that do not clean up after their pets guilty of a criminal offence subject to a 30 day term of imprisonment.”

Steve in Foutenay-sous-Bois in the greater Paris region added: “Try and be proud of your town, keep it clean!”

Insects

Running with the theme of controlling the natural world, a resident of the Loire Valley called for a Mosquito Abatement law, adding: “Each Mairie would have a department for controlling mosquitoes”.

There is in fact one French town that does have a local bylaw banning mosquitoes – although we’re unsure how many mosquitoes have been prosecuted so far.

Displaying less ambition but more practicality, one Brittany resident suggested: “Use window screens to keep out flies.”

Transport and shopping

Some people were more practical in their suggestions, looking at ways to enhance daily life.

Simon Wookey who has lived in both Paris and Tours suggested: “Expand the TGV network and bring a lot more public transit to smaller cities like Tours – more trams and Metros – and more frequent regional rail for rural communities.”

This is in fact the demand of many residents of small towns and rural areas, with poor public services outside of the cities cited as a major factor in voting at election time.

Keith Jackson suggested: “Make it easier for shops to open on a Sunday, if they want to.”

While Neil Munro said: “Restaurants and bars to be open at least 6 days a week from 11am to 2pm and 6pm to 10pm all year” – while customers might appreciate his suggestion it’s unlikely that bar and restaurant staff would feel that this one improved their lives.

And Johnny Baldry said: “I’d make it possible to buy paracetamol in supermarkets instead of having to queue for 20 minutes in the pharmacy – but I realise that even with unlimited power this may not be achievable.”

Overseas aid

A British visitor signing themselves only as EH had a slightly leftfield suggestion: “I would send 50 percent of all their road repair teams to Britain, leading to immeasurably improved sentiments and gratitude by the British towards the French!”

The winner

But if the opportunity arose, we think that Janet Keating should be declared the all-powerful deity of France and we look forward to achieving French fluency under her regime.

Many thanks to everyone who sent us suggestions, the above are just a sample of the many good ideas that we received. Feel free to add your thoughts in the comments section below.

Member comments

  1. I would love to see the end of French restaurants playing music. They didn’t use to and you could talk during your meal. Now they are all starting to play music and it’s getting so loud in the place that you can’t talk without shouting. We deliberately look for restaurants that are quiet. If I want noisy restaurants, I’ll stay in the USA

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LIVING IN FRANCE

Explained: What is the law in France on prostitution

As the European court of human rights upholds France's laws on prostitution, here's a look at what the law says on the buying and selling of sex.

Explained: What is the law in France on prostitution

On Thursday the European Court of Human Rights ruled in favour of a French law from 2016 that radically overhauled the country’s laws on prostitution.

So what is the position now in the country that became famous for its legalised brothels, immortalised in the works of painters including Toulouse-Lautrec, Ingrès and Manet? 

History

It was Napoleon who laid out France’s long-standing legal code on lawful but regulated prostitution which saw state-sanctioned brothels known as maisons de tolérance or maisons close opening up in French towns and cities.

The legal position in France remained for a long time that prostitution was legal – albeit under tightly controlled conditions; registered brothels which were ‘discreet’ in appearance, prostitutes who were also registered and subject to regular medical inspections.

However in the period after World War II a series of laws were passed that first outlawed brothels and then criminalised behaviour including soliciting for sex, pimping and sex tourism.

The 2016 law

In 2016 a radical shakeup of the law was proposed, aimed at shifting the balance of power in favour of the people (mostly women) who sell sex.

It first repealed some older laws including the ‘Sarkozy law’ introduced in 2003 that made it a criminal offence to “be present wearing revealing clothing at a location known to be used for prostitution”.

But the main thrust of the law was to make it illegal to buy sex – but not illegal to sell sex, or to solicit it.

The idea was to remove the fear of criminalisation for people selling sex and therefore remove some of the barriers to people seeking help – for example to report a crime. The bill also came with a package of measures designed to help people working as prostitutes to leave the profession, if they want to, and enable them to leave exploitative or dangerous situations. 

It also included measures to give residency cards to the estimated 30,000 foreign people working as prostitutes in France – it is estimated that around 80 percent of sex workers in France are foreigners, the majority from eastern Europe or Africa.

Has it worked?

The intention was undoubtedly good, but many argue it has not worked – including the group of 20 sex workers who took France to the European Court of Human Rights over the law.

They say that criminalising customers means that sex workers are forced to work in more isolated and therefore dangerous places and that the drop in custom means that sex workers are being forced to accept customers that they might in the past have turned away.

The continuing ban on brothels means that sex workers must work alone, which raises their level of risk.

The main French prostitutes union Strass says: “It’s been a catastrophic law for our security and our health.”

However, the European judges rules that there is no evidence that the law itself was making sex work unsafe.

Judges said they were “fully aware of the undeniable difficulties and risks to which prostituted people are exposed while exercising their activity”, including their health and safety.

But they added that these were “already present and observed before the adoption of the law” in 2016, being attributed at the time to the since-repealed law against soliciting.

“There is no consensus on the question of whether the negative effects described by the claimants are directly caused by the… criminalisation of buying sexual acts, or their sale, or are inherent or intrinsic to the phenomenon of prostitution… or a whole array of social and behavioural factors,” the judges said.

So what exactly does the law say now?

Buying sex is illegal, punishable by a fine of up to €1,500, rising to €3,750 for repeat offenders. This applies whatever the situation – street prostitution, in a brothel or massage parlour or via an online transaction. 

Clubs including fetish clubs and swingers clubs are legal.

How strictly this law is enforced varies widely according to both place and time.

Selling sex is legal, as is soliciting for sex, however owning or operating a brothel is illegal. It is illegal to live off the earnings of a prostitute or to help or pressure someone to prostitute themselves.

Prostitutes are required to pay tax on their earnings and make an annual tax declaration in the same way as all other self-employed workers in France.

Prostitutes have a union and during the Covid pandemic qualified for furlough payments when they could not work.

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