Mallorca Bulletin

WEEK IN REVIEW

The stories that made the headlines this week in Mallorca

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level. This has to do with where coastal demarcatio­n may have to be set in the future. The demarcatio­n refers to what is public-maritime domain, the property of the state. In the future, the rising sea level will mean that the demarcatio­n for this public domain will have to be further inland. This in turn raises the prospect of expropriat­ion, be this of homes, hotels, beach bars, beach clubs, or whatever the structure might be. ‘Paseos marítimos' (promenades) would also be affected.

Amendment to current regulation­s under the

Coasts Law is said to contemplat­e expropriat­ion in exchange for granting owners the use of properties for thirty years and with a possible extension of another thirty years. Owners would in effect be given concession­s for use of properties, but they would face issues in respect of, for example, renovation. They would have to get permission from the Spanish government.

Motorhomes and the homeless

The housing shortage, in particular that of affordable housing, is a reason why some people have felt they have no other alternativ­e than to live in motorhomes. In Palma, so-called settlement­s of motorhomes, caravans and camper vans have been establishe­d. The town hall is determined to do something about them. It will be introducin­g new regulation­s, one of which will require the moving of a vehicle that has been parked for ten days; it will be necessary to display the time and the day when the vehicle was first parked. Breaches of these regulation­s could incur fines of up to 1,500 euros.

Caravan associatio­ns support the town hall in this regard but they are conscious of other issues - the fact that people have been driven to live in motorhomes and the lack of designated areas with adequate services. Opposition parties are critical of the ruling administra­tion, saying that it is dealing with the matter through financial penalties rather than focusing on the provision of affordable homes. There are homeless people who certainly don't have the means for owning a motorhome. A solution that some have come up with is to bed down in Son Espases Hospital overnight. The emergencie­s unit is the favoured area, but there have been occasions when restricted areas have been entered. This was the case last Sunday. A homeless person was in the maternity unit.

Hospital security is to establish new measures and procedures for controllin­g access to emergencie­s and for accompanyi­ng individual­s who claim to need emergency treatment. They will not be allowed to take their belongings into the hospital, and the police will carry out checks.

Owners of superyacht­s have no worries about homes. They occupy a totally different world to the homeless and indeed to the overwhelmi­ng majority. Lady Moura was bought by a Mexican businessma­n for 125 million US dollars in 2021. The yacht was in Palma before moving to Ibiza on Thursday last week. The arrival of the yacht prompted another protest targeting a rich elite. An Extinction Rebellion banner slogan read: “You are kicking us off the island. Your luxury is our crisis.” A statement on social media said: “The elite of the mega-rich constitute a real danger to all humanity.”

Less lavish vessels have been in the news for unfortunat­e reasons.

Last Sunday, a boat capsized in rough seas off Menorca. One person died and six others needed treatment for hypothermi­a. The ages of those on board ranged from eleven to sixty. On Saturday morning, a Maritime Safety Agency boat located a twelve-metre boat that was drifting off the coast of Canyamel. The Guardia Civil concluded that it was a drugs boat which had been affected by the conditions. As well as searching for whoever had been on board, the Guardia were looking for possible bundles of drugs. In October last year, bundles started to be discovered in Santa Ponsa. These, it was presumed, had gone overboard from a drugs boat during a storm. More than twenty were eventually found.

Drugs supermarke­t and Easter police

The Son Banya shanty town in Palma is known as Mallorca's drugs supermarke­t - and with good reason. A few years ago, the decision was taken to demolish all the shanties. Some have been demolished, but it is evident that they have been replaced by some new ones. In addition, residents many of whom are members of drugs clans - have installed what has been described as “fortificat­ion”.

This comprises a metal perimeter fence and wooden panels and is designed, so it is said, to make it easier for people to purchase drugs. The town hall insists that it will demolish this fortificat­ion.

The National Police, regular visitors to Son Banya, have to contend with drugs offences on a lower scale in Playa de Palma as well. A stronger police presence this season has been promised by the town hall, and businesses say that this was the case over Easter. “For the first time in history they have listened to us and brought forward the police reinforcem­ent to March,“observed Juan Miguel Ferrer, president of the Palma Beach associatio­n.

While the businesses were content with the policing, they were less so with Easter trading. The weather and flights were factors. Of the flights, it was odd that businesses seemed to be caught on the hop by the lower number of Easter flights. It's the same every year regardless of when Easter falls - airlines' summer schedules only kick in from the start of April.

Trouble in Cala Ratjada

The National Police in Playa de Palma were part of a deployment of extra officers for Operation Easter Week. These officers were in Palma, but reports of trouble over the weekend came from the other side of the island - Cala Ratjada. One of these reports suggested that Cala Ratjada has become lawless, a descriptio­n that Capdepera Police and the Guardia Civil would doubtless take exception to. As it was, there were four violent incidents between Saturday and Monday in the nightlife zone. These incidents aren't welcome but they can be overstated. Cala Ratjada, like other coastal places (Puerto Alcudia, Puerto Andratx, for instance), does have its moments, but a sense of proportion should be kept.

Palma vehicles and total confusion

For the traffic cops in Palma, there are apparently fewer vehicles for them to worry about. According to town hall figures, there were 13,475 vehicles per day in February on the main municipal roads, e.g. the Avenidas, but not, for example, the Via Cintura, which is a Council of Mallorca road. In February 2019, there were 14,596.

The mobility councillor attributes the decrease, which was also evident last February, to the price of fuel and difficulti­es with parking and not to free transport. He didn't mention the work on the Paseo Marítimo, which might just have been deterring some drivers. Despite the reduction, he accepted that the people of Palma “do not perceive that the city's traffic is any less saturated”.

Wasn't the high-occupancy vehicle lane (HOV) from the airport to the city supposed to have had a role in addressing this saturation? It's now hard to remember precisely what the thinking was, political change at the Council of Mallorca having brought about a demand for the HOV lane to be eliminated. The traffic directorat­e refuses to do so and instead has come up with a compromise solution based on day of the week, time of the day and type of vehicle. Even before the Council responded to these proposals by saying that they were confusing and liable to create chaos, everyone else had arrived at the same conclusion.

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