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TODAY IN ITALY

Today in Italy: A roundup of the latest news on Thursday

Italy to further restrict building superbonus, controversial highway code changes approved, Bologna's 'leaning tower' to be saved, and more news from Italy on Thursday.

Italy, superbonus
A central Rome building undergoing renovation work under superbonus funding. Photo by Tiziana FABI / AFP

Italy’s top story on Thursday:

The front pages of many of Italy’s newpapers on Thursday morning featured headlines about the building ‘superbonus’, the now tightly-restricted scheme which once offered funds of up to 110 percent towards the cost of renovation work.

Government ministers had put forward a bill on Wednesday aiming to further limit the credit available via the scheme, with economy minister Giancarlo Giorgetti saying Italy is “addicted” the the funding.

New claims can no longer be submitted by homeowners, as the scheme has already been limited multiple times by the current government over fears of skyrocketing costs.

The new bill would also stop credit for non-profit organisations, social housing projects, and towns affected by flooding and earthquakes – though revisions are expected before the final version is approved, according to reports.

Lower house approves controversial Highway Code reforms

The Lower House on Wednesday approved a contested reform of the Highway Code put forward by Transport Minister Matteo Salvini, which critics said would increase rather than decrease road safety risks.

The bill got the green light with 163 votes in favour and 107 against and now moves to the Senate for final approval, reported Sky TG24.

The raft of planned measures includes higher penalties for drivers caught using mobile phones at the wheel, and a requirement for riders of e-scooters to wear helmets, have a number plate and get insurance.

But the bill more controversially limits local authorities’ power to introduce new cycle paths, limited-traffic areas or lower speed limits, such as the 30km/h limits planned in many cities, or to combat speeding using speed cameras, without approval from the transport ministry.

Messina Denaro helper ‘managed NRRP funds’

One of three men arrested for assisting late fugitive mafia boss Matteo Messina Denaro in his 30-year run from the law managed EU funds under the post-Covid National Recovery and Resilience Plan (NRRP), prosecutors said on Wednesday.

Massimo Gentile, a Sicilian architect living in Limbiate, in the province of Monza, allegedly managed dozens of projects financed by the NRRP, they said.

He is also alleged to have lent Messina Denaro his identity to obtain false documents enabling him to buy a car and a motorbike, according to news reports.

A relative of the husband of the boss’s alleged lover, Laura Bonafede, Gentile worked for Limbiate’s council.

Bologna ‘leaning tower’ to be secured with Pisa scaffolding

Bologna’s iconic Garisenda tower, which experts say is in a “worrying state” of stability, will be secured with scaffolding from the Leaning Tower of Pisa in a move to stop it from toppling, Mayor Matteo Lepore told a press conference on Wednesday.

“Once the steel scaffolding already used in Pisa are installed, the Garisenda (tower) will be secured, and will go from the yellow level (of danger) to the green level,” he said.

The Italian culture ministry has earmarked five million euros for work on the tower, which has been cordoned off, with the project to run until June 2026, according to Italian news reports.

Built between between 1109 and 1119, the Garisenda tower, which stands alongside the 97-metre Asinelli tower, is one of the northern Italian city’s most recognisable symbols

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TODAY IN ITALY

Today in Italy: A roundup of the latest news on Monday

Meloni and Schlein to debate ahead of European elections, new data on birth rates among foreign mothers in Italy shows new trend, plastic tax postponed again, and other news from Italy on Monday.

Today in Italy: A roundup of the latest news on Monday

Meloni and Schlein to hold unprecedented debate

Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni will spar with main opposition party leader Elly Schlein in an unprecedented debate on May 23rd ahead of the European elections, according to the news bureau AFP.

The debate – the first ever in Italy between a sitting prime minister and the head of the opposition – will be hosted on Rai1, the flagship station of the state broadcaster.

Meloni, head of the Brothers of Italy party, has been in power since October 2022. Schlein was elected to lead the opposition centre-left Democratic Party (PD) in March 2023.

Both are at the top of their party’s lists for the June 8th-9th European elections. However, neither will take their seats in the European Parliament, with Meloni planning to stay on as prime minister and Schlein preferring to remain a member of the Italian chamber of deputies.

Foreign mothers in Italy are having fewer children, new data shows

Foreign women, once key in bolstering Italy’s declining birth rates, now have fewer children and at older ages, mirroring the trends of native Italians, according to the most recent data.

According to the 2023 ISMU Foundation report, while foreign births slightly increased from 34,000 in 2002 to 53,000 in 2022, the overall fertility rate among foreign women in Italy has declined.

This drop – from a total fertility rate of 2.8 in 2002 to 1.9 in 2022 – mirrored a closer alignment with Italian birth trends, business newspaper Il Sole 24 Ore reported.

The shift was attributed to various factors, including the challenges migrants face and the high employment rates among foreign women, many of whom are employed in demanding full-time jobs.

Plastic tax delayed again, sugar tax to be rolled out from July

Italy has postponed the implementation of the plastic tax for a seventh time, extending its start date to July 2026.

On the other hand, a sugar tax was set to be rolled out slowly from July 1st, 2024, before fully coming into effect in July 2026, financial newspaper Il Sole 24 Ore reported.

The two tax measures were expected to generate approximately 650 million euros in annual revenue for the state, but have faced protests from Italian businesses since their introduction in 2020.

Assobibe, an association representing the producers of non-alcoholic drinks in Italy, on Friday described the planned sugar tax as “useless and harmful”.

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