Malta Independent

Zebbug, Hamrun, Zabbar councils win Transport Malta grant for permanent alternativ­e transport measures

- ■ Albert Galea

The local councils of Zebbug, Hamrun, and Zabbar have all won a grant of between €30,000 and €50,000 from Transport Malta for the implementa­tion of permanent measures to promote alternativ­e methods of transport.

Announcing the news at the launch for European Mobility Week, which Malta will be taking part in, Transport Minister Ian Borg said that he hoped to see more councils adopt measures such as these in the future.

The Zabbar local council will be using the grant to invest in a system which turns the roads near the locality’s schools into pedestrian zones automatica­lly, hence eliminatin­g the need to rely on police officers or community officers to close the road.

The Zebbug local council meanwhile will be investing in a pedalassis­ted tricycle which will be used to, amongst other things, collect waste in the village’s narrow roads and for other services within the locality’s urban conservati­on area. The Hamrun local council will then be using the grant to pedestrian­ise the Little Sister of the Poor street so to create a better environmen­t.

Other localities also applied for funding for temporary initiative­s, with Gharb, Ghajnsiele­m, Mqabba, Hamrun, and Fgura all receiving grants in this regard. Mqabba’s Socjeta Muzikali Madonna Tal-Gilju also received a grant. Temporary initiative­s which fall under this cap include the organisati­on of car free days and the promotion of car pooling.

Borg said that the government was trying, as much as possible, to implement a wide transport strategy with measures promoting all alternativ­e means of transport, but noted that one cannot simply focus on just one measure or means of transport and ignore the rest.

He noted that he is sometimes criticised for his work, something which he has no qualms with, and added that initiative­s for transport are best implemente­d together, but said that one cannot expect the population to stop using their cars from one day to the next

“The best choice is to incentivis­e each mode of transport so that the country can move forward in the mobility sector,” Borg said.

The Parliament­ary Secretary responsibl­e for local councils Silvio Parnis meanwhile said that councils must adopt a new mentality in favour of the environmen­t, and used the recent focus put on the separation of waste as an example.

He said that a number of initiative­s where councils implemente­d transport systems to help residents, especially the elderly, move around the locality has been seen, and he augured for more such initiative­s.

He said that this is the type of change that local councils should be aiming to make, so to truly make people feel like the council is not only a local government but also a second home.

European Mobility Week, which was launched during this press conference in Zabbar, is an annual, Europe-wide campaign which focuses on sustainabl­e urban mobility. It will run between 16 and 22 September, with over 2,700 towns and cities registered to take part, and over 2,100 mobility actions, which can also be put forward by NGOs, businesses, and schools, have been registered.

 ?? Photos: Alenka Falzon ??
Photos: Alenka Falzon
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