Wheelchair fund hits €2,200 ; Cruise ships bring €46 million ; Shopping Centre finalists
Today’s Photo Thanks to Debs … Pet garden butterfly, he’s getting a little old now hence the holes in his starboard wing – must have been in a dog fight!
From the Norwich Evening News : More holidaymakers can fly to Madeira from Norwich International Airport next year with Atlantic Holidays offering six direct flights from the airport on Mondays from July 26 to August 30.
Fátima arrived in Ribeira Brava last night with a huge entourage of cars and motorbikes, all honking their horns, as well as a police escort. The convey must have taken 10 minutes to pass my house. The statue is supposed to be going around the churches over several months, but checking back on earlier blogs it should have already been and gone from Ribeira Brava, so perhaps it was just ‘passing through’. UPDATE: Apparently it was on the way from the high zones of Ribeira Brava bound for Serra da Água, where it will leave again today for the Igreja de São Bento in Ribeira Brava, where it will stay until Sunday.
Many thanks to Elaine once again for yesterday’s top news stories :
Solidarity campaign has collected 2.200 Euros. The campaign to raise funds to donate an electric wheelchair to Ilda Maria Andrade has brought together around 2,200 Euros. The appeal began with a reader’s letter in the Diário and donations exceeded 700 Euros. This week this has more than doubled with a businessman linked to the company Modas Jacinto’s contributing 1,500 Euros. Even so, funds raised are still less than half the amount needed to purchase the equipment, estimated at 5,959 Euros plus VAT. The 59 year old meningitis and osteoporosis sufferer also needs a ramp built to access her home, and Ribeira Brava Council is studying the possibility of providing one, estimated at 25,000 Euros.
Parishes adhere to the banners of baby Jesus. All over Portugal and Madeira this Christmas you will be able to see on balconies and in windows, cloth banners with the image of baby Jesus. In order to bring the true traditional spirit of a Christian Christmas, in which the symbol is baby Jesus, several parishes across the region – Nazaré, Monte and Câmara de Lobos for example - will sell such banners. From next week, they will be on sale for 15 Euros and the profits will provide baskets for needy families, support for the homeless and payment for works of the parish. The project ‘Flags for Christmas 2009′ was created on the continent by a group of families who wanted to share the joy of Christmas with others but noticed a void of Christian symbols in the decorations for Christmas. On the mainland there are about 20,000 banners and the object is to reach 30,000.
Integration of toxicodependents and police on the football field at Andorinha. The football match ended 8 – 4 in favour of the police. Social integration and promotion of healthy lifestyles mattered more than the result. A group of young people, mainly recovering drug addicts, Rua do Bairro de Santo Amaro Team, and the local police involved in the program Policing in Proximity were playing. The trophy won by the police was offered as a gesture of ‘fair play’ to the losing team and a joint lunch followed.
€46 million revenue from cruise ships. The Port of Funchal has higher taxes than the Canary Islands, justified by the fact that passengers and companies are pleased with the destination. The higher taxes are necessary to maintain the quality of the port. The new passenger terminal should improve tourist satisfaction. This year, six ships could not moor due to lack of space. The answer might be an extension of the south jetty or north pier. In comparison, the hotel business generates more than €300 million per year.
Two shopping centres among Europe’s finalists. Forum Madeira and MadeiraShopping are among the finalists for ESCA 2009 award. The International Committee of Shopping Centres announced the finalists last week and the winners will be known on 18 June 2010 in Vienna. MadeiraShopping is nominated in the category ‘Public Relations’ for the fashion event ‘Pop-Up’, together with ArrabidaShopping, CascaisShopping and two Spanish centres. Forum Madeira is nominated in two categories. In ‘Community Relations’ it is nominated along with 10 other centres of the same chain, for the project ‘Will’s Book – The Magic Library’ and the project ‘RecyclART’. In the category ‘Sales, Promotions and Events’ for the project ‘Christmas Competition’. MadeiraShopping has already won European Awards 2002 in the category ‘New Shopping Centres’ and Madeira Forum won in the category ‘Christmas Present’ in 2008.
‘Miguel Angelo’. Enigmatic work in Gaula. An enigmatic work in Gaula has led to fears that public funds have been misapplied. The project which was completed in record time (5 days) was the elongation of Rua de São João Castelejo by a little more than one kilometre. According to the Regional Secretary of Social Infrastructure, the work was to repair deficiencies that occurred in the construction of the fast route Funchal -Airport. But reports and photos show that when the contractor Construtura do Tamega tore up the tarmac to lay infrastructure, there have been left 5 cm longitudinal tears in the asphalt. Strangely, company officials and the population say that nothing had been placed underneath the tarmac, no infrastructure laid, just the trench opened and then closed. The members of the Parish Council of Gaula say they do not know anything about the work. They are puzzled why the road was subject to total resurfacing when the tarmac was in good condition and there are worse roads needing repair in the area. Both Tamega and the Regional Secretary say that the repair of defects in the construction work was written in the contract and the firm paid for the repair work. They both explain that the opening of the trench was to repair a longitudinal fissure that had occurred in the road surface.
Support for travel benefits half of the residents. Since the social mobility allowance was introduced by the State, 49.3% less trips (104,000 passages) made by residents have been claimed after liberalization of air routes. Before liberalization of the air traffic, companies charged the State a fee of 118 Euros for 232,000 tickets sold to Lisbon and Porto. After liberalization, resident’s support is 60 Euros each trip or 30 Euros each way. Compared to trips made before liberalization, the State support to passengers fell 49.3%. So the State wins in two ways; the amount of support and the amount spent. The cost of air fare to and from Lisbon has fallen but it is not clear why the number of Madeirans claiming social mobility support has halved. Before liberalization, 22.9% of passengers were entitled to subsidy and since then, it has fallen to 11.4%. Some claims are outside the time limit and the Post Office still has 125 cases unresolved. The movement at the airports fell by 2.6% at Porto and 4.4% at Madeira, and has increased 18.5% at Lisbon. Before liberalization, the State spent 23 million Euros on support, an average of 103 Euros although the companies were entitled to receive 118 Euros per resident. This year, the full year of liberalization, the State spent only 7.5 million Euros for 117,513 tickets sold, ie a saving of 15.5 million Euros. The Government now wants an allowance equivalent to half the value of the ticket, which would be 73 Euros (13 Euros more than the current 60 Euros).
Driver without a licence and insurance arrested twice in a few hours. A 26 year old man was arrested twice on Friday and Saturday for driving without a licence and without insurance. He was arrested on Friday evening in Funchal and again, hours later, in the early hours of Saturday in Santa Cruz. The second time, he was arrested for these two offences and also for driving a seized vehicle and driving under the influence of alcohol (1.5 g/l). He went to Santa Cruz to "forget his grief". The police stopped him after his car broke down and he made a dangerous manoeuvre in the opposite direction to which he was travelling, between Santa Cruz and Funchal.
Today’s news headlines from the front page of the Diário de Notícias :
Madeira hosts Christmas party of UEFA – Platini avoids touching on controversial matters. Besides the meeting of the top European Football executive committee, Madeira is to be the venue for the annual UEFA Xmas bash. The party will be tomorrow night in Reid’s Palace Hotel, the same hotel where all the committee members are staying. Some of the members of the reunion are known to be staying on after ‘official business’ to enjoy the delights of Madeira. UEFA boss Michel Platini had already made enquiries. "He asked me if there is good weather. It is very satisfying to finally have an Executive Committee scheduled for Madeira, which was not easy, because other countries had already been asking (to host?) for much longer than Portugal. There is curiosity to know Madeira and I hope the good weather continues", said the president of the Portuguese Football Federation. the main items on the agenda include the Euro 2012, where some important final decisions will be made about the stadiums to be used, and some issues related to regulations, and some discussions about the internal organisation of UEFA itself. I knew it, and said some weeks ago that it was a Christmas jolly in disguise. Life is tough for football’s top bosses, and an expensive bash in Reid’s is probably just the remedy (warning : Der sarcasm in use).
New president of U.D. Santana criticises previous management.
Today’s main news headline : Government delays payments – There are 55 cases of ‘burden sharing’ on Madeira and works have already been inaugurated that will only be paid in 2011. It’s not an uncommon practice when the treasury is stretched, with public and private institutions sharing the financial burden, with their due payments delayed until better times. The list of 55 such cases has already been decided. The ‘Construction of the connection tunnel to the central and northern parts of the town of Ribeira Brava’ is the first example given of the postponement of payments. The work was finished and inaugurated long ago, but last October, by order of Ventura Garcês the payment terms were amended from those that provided for payment of the work in three years (€205,000 in 2006, €1.9 million in 2007 and €1.9 in 2008). The first two years were paid, but in the final one nothing was paid, and just €500,000 this year. The final €1.4 million will be delayed until next year. It’s no wonder public works contracts are so darn expensive, with companies involved in the tender processes having to factor in the costs of vastly delayed payments, as well as the back-handers needed to win the business. Still, several senior politicians have fingers in the pies, so when it comes down to it, arms can be twisted and contract terms amended without too much reaction from some of the companies affected.
Azoreans reject the amendment to the Madeira Regional Finance Law. The Regional Parliament’s Economy Committee is opposing Madeira’s proposal to amend the law on regional financing. According to the Committee, the Azores would stand to lose 32 million Euros if Madeira’s amendment to the law is passed by the Assembly of the Republic. The amendment was proposed by the Madeira PSD. In the Azores, both the Socialist Party and the CDS are against any changes in the legislation. The only party in the archipelago to support the amendment is the PSD, providing the introduction of a clause ensuring that the Azores would not lose out. (Courtesy of the RTP Azores website / Kitty Bale).
The main photo on the front page shows an elderly lady, sat in her dressing gown, and looking rather perturbed. One year of waiting for an urgent operation – Isabel Rodrigues, aged 84, is desperate for the promised cataract operations. SESARAM hide the number of patients waiting and the waiting time for consultations and surgery. Isabel Margarida Rodrigues lives in Travessa do Pomar, and says that she doesn’t want to die without being able to see again. She cannot see anything through her left eye, and she no longer has the courage to go out of her house alone. With the problem worsening day by day, she waited and waited for an appointment at the hospital, that eventually came this Summer, when the consultant recommended cataract surgery for both eyes. At the same time it was reported that there were already 800 people on the waiting list for that type of surgery. The rest of the article looks at the long waiting lists for that type and many other types of surgery and procedures. The information provided by the health service is criticised by the auditors, who say that "The information system associated with the management of waiting lists (surgical and consultation) has a limited reliability and does not represent a true and fair global view of the patients and potential patients who are awaiting the provision of specialist services by Funchal Central Hospital.
2010 has three less days of rest. Workers will only get 147 rest days in 2010, three less than in 2009. 2010 will provide opportunities for six ‘tolerance’ days, and 5 ‘bridge’ days, and those workers who know how to work the system can maximise their breaks from the 104 weekend days by another 43, using holiday leave (25) and weekday public holidays (10) and the goodwill of employers.
Recordings of ‘Until Tomorrow My Love’ start on the 14th – The mini-series of TVI gets underway here next Monday and brings familiar faces. The new anticipated TV series from the good people of Channel 4 is actually titled ‘Até Amanhã Meu Amor’ in Portuguese.
… and that’s when the Diário website crashed! If anyone else can oblige with the translation of any of the ‘blank’ or sparsely filled headlines, or other news stories, here is the link
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Togolese suspect vessel may be towed. The mystery of the ship ‘Newhope’ that since November 9 has been hovering 12 miles from Funchal thickens. The vessel continues in Portuguese waters, with lack of food and fuel, a situation which the authorities consider strange for a ship travelling between Brazil and India. During the past three weeks the ship has asked permission to anchor, claiming to need supplies, a claim the Maritime Authority does not authorize as there is information that the ship’s certificates are expired and that the ‘Newhope’ is included in a list of ‘black flag’ ships, which constitute a threat to safety and the environment. Now a representative of the shipowner is in Madeira, who in recent days has been trying to encourage the regional authorities to find a solution through supplying while offshore, without the ship entering port and subject to an inspection. The presence in Madeira of the seagoing tug ‘Fairmount Summi’ thickens the mystery. Because there is suspicion that the presence in our seas for five days and without a port of destination, it is linked to the situation of the ‘Newhope’. With lack of water, fuel and oil for the generators and other equipment, the captain of the Togolese boat may request aid and thereby triggering a maritime rescue operation, that would justify the presence of this tug of Dutch flag. Recently the tugboat has towed a ship for 20 days from Brazil to Europe, at high cost, which may link the presence of the ‘Fairmount Summi’ with the situation of ‘Newhope’.
Two boulders threaten road. Two large stones are likely to fall on the road linking Pestana Junior to the access to the motorway. The rocks are about 40 metres away from the road that is used daily by thousands of cars. The warning was made to the Diário by householders residing in the area, who became aware of the situation while searching for mosses and ‘cabrinhas’ for presepios which they are making for Christmas. The two rocks should weigh close to half a ton each, appear to be based on an area of land capable of being easily altered by the elements of erosion, particularly in the event of high intensity rainfall over an extended period. Note that the slopes of the area, limiting the Ribeira de Joao Gomes, have been subject to several visits to remove earth and stones, some of which were conducted in the wake of some landslides or to prevent such an occurrence.
Prisoner of 35 steps. Maria Ilda, 59 years old, has to overcome 35 steps by using her arms whenever leaving and returning home. There was a call for the purchase of an electric wheelchair and the construction of a ramp on 23 November in the letters section of the Diário, as a last resort, but it did not work. She now has osteoporosis causing pain in her shoulders and arms and has difficulty climbing the stairs, especially when it rains. Her wasted and paralysed lower limbs are due to contracting meningitis when she was one and a half years old. A wheelchair would give her some independence but she only has a pension of 200 Euros and the family all work and have no spare income. She has requested support from the Social Security for three years with the help of the specialist rehabilitation nurse but the cost of more than 5,000 Euros could not be met. The ramp would cost about 25,000 Euros. There is a fundraising campaign by the readers of the Diário. The NIB no:00350687000056743002 in the name of Maria Ilda Ascensao Andrade.
Lightning bolts in the unveiling of the illuminations. The lights in downtown Funchal were switched-on on a stormy night with a widespread power-cut, but symbolised the initiation of the Christmas spirit : academics deliver presents and the charity Cáritas collects donations. The actual front page photo shows Xmas decorations like lightning bolts hitting the ground, but unfortunately I can’t reproduce that photo for technical reasons. Anyway the gist of the headline is that the switching-on of the Christmas lights coincided with a very noisy storm last night that put nearly the whole island (more so in the West) into darkness. Here in Ribeira Brava we were in blackness for about half an hour. It was indeed a spectacular storm with numerous dazzling lighting bolts, window-rattling thunder, and very heavy rain. It was almost without wind here which was great as I was able to stand out and watch the sky for a while. An hour or so after it started you wouldn’t have known there had been a storm, and even the moon was visible. Smarty Alec me must have had a premonition as I brought a pack of candles this week! The bit about the charity collections is already covered above in Elaine’s article.
Funchal Tuning Club accompany the Virgin. These are people who modify their vehicles, although illegal here but legal in some parts of the EU. This will be on November 4th when the statue goes from Acadas da Cruz to Ponta do Pargo. It will be in the Diocese of Calheta until the 26th November when it goes to Ribeira Brava and Ponta do Sol. —– An illegal convoy? Will police be in attendance? A bit different from the Popemobile, which was the first vehicle, then bikers, now tuners….next?
Between 2 – 8 November, the Science Centre in Porto Moniz will have the photographic exhibition of the first visit of the Pilgrim Statue to Madeira in 1948. The exhibition has hundreds of photos from the Vicentes Museum and is touring the country.
Quinta do Lorde development within the law. The Legislative Assembly of Madeira approved a 30-page report stating there was no illegality in the construction of the private enterprise in Caniçal. Illegalities had been raised on grounds of the areas of construction and environmental impact. There had been a previous 10,000 page report compiled by prosecutors, mainly 4 political parties and environmental group Quercus. The licensing was approved by all authorities, but there were particular problems with intrusion into the public maritime area. The resort was designed by an American company and will have 740 beds and 370 rooms spread between the hotel and tourist villas and apartments. It will employ 200 and indirectly employ another 100.
Expropriation in São Vicente with police and gunshot into the air – Owners contest the moving in of construction machinery without explanations on the part of the council. Sounds like another bungled compulsory land purchase. The photo shows a JCB diggers with it’s shovel raised, ready to attack a cultivated allotment or garden, but it stopped in it’s tracks when it heard gunfire. 
