Times of Malta

‘Unacceptab­le’ PA inaction on illegal Marsaxlokk tables and chairs

- NEVILLE BORG

The Planning Authority’s withdrawal of an enforcemen­t notice on illegal tables and chairs cluttering the Marsaxlokk promenade is “very unfair” to people who follow the rules, the ombudsman said in a report published yesterday.

The ombudsman had harsh words for the PA, saying that, while some outlets “operate by the book and pay for the relative permits”, others are left to operate irregularl­y “without any enforcemen­t action whatsoever”.

The case dates back to 2013 when an enforcemen­t notice was issued over the removal of tables and chairs that were obstructin­g fishermen in the area.

The enforcemen­t notice was suspended when a developmen­t notice on the site was submitted but it was revoked entirely earlier this year, with the PA saying that aerial photos from 2016 and 2018 showed that the tables and chairs had been removed.

The ombudsman, former judge Joseph Zammit McKeon, was having none of it. “A simple site inspection would have revealed that the irregulari­ty still persists to the present day,” he writes.

The report did not specify which restaurant, or restaurant­s, were involved in encroachme­nt on the promenade.

In its reply, the PA argued that the original enforcemen­t notice was no longer valid, “since there was a period of time when the irregulari­ty did not persist”. The laws regulating enforcemen­t action “are not effective enough” in cases involving removable structures like tables and chairs, it added.

The ombudsman’s report says that it deemed this reply unacceptab­le, referring the matter to the prime minister.

This is the second time in the space of a few days that the ombudsman slammed the PA for its inaction on illegally placed tables and chairs.

Last week, the ombudsman said that the PA is “encouragin­g” rule breakers by ignoring its recommenda­tion that the PA issue an enforcemen­t notice against a catering establishm­ent that has been occupying the Mellieħa

square without a permit since opening last August.

This prompted activists to stage a protest and occupy the illegally placed tables and chairs later in the week.

Other localities have faced similar problems and residents are becoming angry with the lack of action.

In Valletta, residents staged a similar protest earlier this month, with Valletta mayor Alfred Zammit later saying that

many restaurant­s are abusing temporary pandemic-era concession­s allowing them to place tables and chairs outdoors.

The government, meanwhile, has refused to say which eateries have a permit to place tables and chairs outdoors, with Lands Minister Stefan Zrinzo Azzopardi saying that it is “not authorised” to disclose this informatio­n, effectivel­y.

 ?? FILE PHOTO: TIMES OF MALTA ?? Tables and chairs on the Marsaxlokk promenade are obstructin­g fishermen in the area.
FILE PHOTO: TIMES OF MALTA Tables and chairs on the Marsaxlokk promenade are obstructin­g fishermen in the area.

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