The Borneo Post

Venice offcials give green light to ticket ‘experiment’ for tourists

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Venice officials agreed Tuesday to test a fee on day tourists to the overcrowde­d historic centre, weeks after Unesco warned it could list the city as an at-risk world heritage site.

The Venice city council voted in favour of a limited test, to begin next spring, of a long-debated ticketing system that critics say will neverthele­ss do little to stem the hordes of tourists who descend each year.

Day visitors will face a five euro (US$5.40) charge for entry into the historic centre.

Authoritie­s have debated for years – without taking concrete action – over how best to regulate the millions of visitors to the famous watery city, who come anxious to see sights including St Mark’s Square, the Rialto Bridge and its countless picturesqu­e canals. But the ticketing plan has been repeatedly postponed over concerns it will seriously dent tourist revenue and compromise freedom of movement.

Unesco, the cultural arm of the United Nations, warned in July that Venice risked “irreversib­le” damage due to a string of issues ranging from mass tourism to climate change, and recommende­d it be put on its endangered list.

“It’s a first step,” said Mayor Luigi Brugnaro, who engaged in a shouting match with a crowd of a few dozen people in the council chambers ahead of the vote, calling them “violent and fascist”.

His administra­tion – which he said had shown “courage and practicali­ty” – agreed last week to what he described as an “experiment”. But the opposition cast the tax as a hastily arranged concession to Unesco, while accusing the administra­tion of failing to conduct studies over whether the fee would even work to keep tourists away.

“This won’t disincenti­vize people in the slightest from coming to Venice,” said council member Alessandro Baglioni.

“Fifty euros might have done something,” said another council member, Gianfranco Bettin.

Last year, some 3.2 million tourists stayed overnight in Venice’s historic centre, according to official data – a number that does not include the thousands of daily visitors who visit just for the day. The five-euro tax will exempt those tourists who stay at least one night in a hotel, as well as children 14 years old and younger.

 ?? AFP photo — ?? File photo shows tourists taking a Gondola ride across a canal in Venice.
AFP photo — File photo shows tourists taking a Gondola ride across a canal in Venice.

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