Times of Malta

Part of Attard’s Wied Inċita to become public open space

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Parts of Wied Inċita, in Attard, previously occupied by a landscape consortium, will be turned into a public open space in a few months, Prime Minister Robert Abela said yesterday.

Project Green, the State agency tasked with urban greening projects, is working to turn land in the area into a place that the broader public could enjoy.

Works there would be completed “within a few months”, he said, and legal reforms meant farmers in the area were shielded from eviction.

The tract of land in question was used for several years by the Environmen­tal Landscapes Consortium (ELC), a public-private partnershi­p tasked with landscapin­g public areas for roughly two decades, as a plant nursery.

The ELC ceased operations some years ago and the Central Link road project took up some of the land it used in Attard. The rest remained unused.

Abela was addressing a press conference to mark two years since the Labour government was re-elected. His ministers and parliament­ary secretarie­s at the office of the prime minister were present during the media event.

He said the Labour government provided economic stability and had done the unthinkabl­e to keep a lid on prices.

“We did what others told us not to do – touch the free market,” he said, alluding to the Stabbiltà initiative, which saw several food retailers agree to cut prices for a number of staple products by 15 per cent.

“Now 500 businesses joined the scheme,” Abela said as he noted that food inflation had dropped by 1.1 percentage points since the scheme was introduced.

“Inflation would have been double that had we not taken the steps we did,” he said. Abela said Eurostat figures showed that, last year, Malta’s GDP surpassed the mean for the eurozone, thanks to “record” levels of investment and tourist visits.

The prime minister listed some of the measures introduced by his government to help citizens – from increases in children’s allowances and pensions to financial support for first-time property buyers.

“It is clear that the people are appreciati­ng this and are, rightfully, expecting more,” he said.

Abela said the government was also working to reform labour markets and industrial sectors: it was introducin­g skills cards for the tourism sector and new rules for rental properties and had started regulating temping agencies, which now have until June to align themselves with the law.

He described work to introduce licensing for constructi­on contractor­s as evidence of “unpreceden­ted” reform of the sector and said a cabinet subcommitt­ee tasked with coordinati­ng implementa­tion of the Sofia inquiry recommenda­tions also had the remit to go beyond that report and made additional proposals.

 ?? PHOTO: DARRIN ZAMMIT LUPI ?? Part of Wied Inċita served as a base for ELC for several years.
PHOTO: DARRIN ZAMMIT LUPI Part of Wied Inċita served as a base for ELC for several years.
 ?? PHOTO: MATTHEW MIRABELLI ?? Robert Abela addressing yesterday’s press conference.
PHOTO: MATTHEW MIRABELLI Robert Abela addressing yesterday’s press conference.

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