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Callous
Disregard For Residents' Welfare
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Flimkien ghal Ambjent
Ahjar (FAA) deplores the fact that once again the Fort Cambridge
(ex-Holiday Inn) project is set to violate A traffic management
plan for the area is still being prepared by ADT. In an area, which is
already often gridlocked at peak hours, the effect of the approximately
1,000 more cars that the project will bring into the area is a key issue. A project of these
dimensions, which has already created so much inconvenience during the
excavation phase should be undertaking a Social Impact Assessment (SIA) in
order to study how the whole project is going to affect residents, both
during the construction as well as later operational phases, and how such
impacts can be reduced. This
SIA had been repeatedly requested by the Sliema Local Council and
the request had been accepted by MEPA. Other projects have been made to
prepare a thorough SIA, so why not Fort Cambridge? Sliema’s residents
have been living in a construction site for decades.
Over-development in Sliema is changing the Sliema community in
every way, both as regards structure and age, as well as population
density, way of life, quality of life, transport and even health issues.
In spite of this, no one is caring about how this change is being
brought about and no attempt is being made to alleviate the impacts of
this change on Sliema’s residents. In the context of an
already established community, an SIA is the most important part of an
environment assessment, as it ties together all the other studies in
assessing how the construction, increased traffic, the use of water and
electricity and drainage services, shading, winds and visual impact are
going to affect residents’ way of life, physical and mental health and
reduce as far as possible the negative impacts. FAA has always
maintained that the developers’ argument that high-rise development is
better than intensive low development rings hollow when the area has
already reached saturation point, as highlighted in MEPA’s Local Plans.
Such a concentration of projects which are changing every aspect of life
in Sliema, require a Strategic Environment Assessment in order to gauge
the area’s requirements and ability to cope with such massive
developments, as well to identify any remedial measures to be taken.
MEPA’s outright refusal to carry out such an assessment indicates
a callous disregard for residents’ welfare on the part of the
authorities and a single-minded determination to push through building
projects at any cost to the population. This is not to mention
the projects’ damage to our heritage, as ‘protected’ vistas of the
whole harbour area will change, and the historic skyline of Valletta will
never be the same again. When Dr. Gonzi
addressed Qui si-Sana residents as outgoing Prime Minister one week before
the election, he promised them that their needs would be taken into
account and that they would be consulted.
So far no consultation has taken place.
As Minister in charge of MEPA, the Prime Minister should put such
promises into action by ordering a Strategic Assessment (SEA) and Social
Impact Assessment. Flimkien ghal Ambjent
Ahjar |
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