Malta Independent

Db Group project: PA chairman authorised jet to transport board member

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Planning Authority chairman Johann Buttigieg authorised the use of a private jet to transport a board member to Malta from her vacation abroad in time for the decision on the db Group project at the former ITS land in Pembroke, the authority said.

The cost of the service - €8,750 – was within the limit that can be authorised by the chairman, and so no endorsemen­t was required from the government.

The PA’s statement came in the wake of a controvers­y that erupted after board member Jacqueline Gili was brought back to Malta – and later flown back to continue her family holiday in Sicily – for a vote that approved the db Group project, which includes the building of a 38-storey tower. The vote was taken on 20 September, and passed with 10 votes in favour and four against.

A spokesman told the media that the government did not agree with the move made by the PA.

In its statement yesterday afternoon, the PA said that in August 2016, when a similar high-rise planning applicatio­n was approved, much criticism had been levelled at a board member who for medical reasons was not able to be present for such an important project.

The authority felt that the db Group project, known also as the City Centre developmen­t, was a high profile case and carried the same magnitude and importance as that of other high-rise projects. For this reason, the authority wanted to make sure that all the Planning Board members were present for the public meeting, the authority said.

When the date for the meeting in public of the City Centre project was communicat­ed to the Planning Board members 15 days before, Gili had informed the authority that she was going to be away on a family vacation.

Instead of requesting Gili to inconvenie­ntly cancel her vacation and re-imburse her all the expenses of her family’s holiday, the Planning Authority opted to look into making the necessary arrangemen­ts for her, being the only board member abroad, to be flown back to Malta for a few hours to attend the meeting in public.

City Centre, as developers, paid an applicatio­n fee of over €1.2 million, the PA said. The public meeting outside the premises of the Planning Authority did not exceed €25,000. The costs associated with the public meeting included the hire of the venue, sound, stage, security and police presence and other logistical requiremen­ts. The flights for Ms Gili to return for the meeting cost a total of €8,750. The PA attached a copy of the receipt.

In view that the amounts were within the limit that can be authorised by the executive chairperso­n, no further endorsemen­ts were required by Government, the PA said.

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