Friday, August 10, 2012
The Teatro Breton As Symbol
Nobody knows how long will the Teatro Breton extinct with the guts open, offering the devastating image of a city devastated by war. But knowing the infamous slowness of our courts, the thing can go for years.
I suspect the rubble of the building reflects the wicked down half haste with which many decisions then municipal Justice is responsible for subsequent amendments to the delay of the work and its consequent extra cost to the taxpayer. And so we go.
Not the first happened, but the last, so far, a series of erratic municipal decisions from the parking lot of the Plaza de Los Bandos to the demolition of houses in the Wall, over the bridge of San Jose. What's next?
The good news-bad, one might say, is both foolish and futile haste contrasts with the slow delinquent municipal many other decisions, such as lack of penalties for traffic violations or barred at the time the compensation due to some volume builders building area of many works. Now that is a blow to the municipal coffers and more at a time of crisis in which all the municipalities of Spain rack their brains to get some resources that are lacking.
Some might think that everywhere baked beans and there you have if not for the district in Valencia controversial CabaƱal, which degrades every day as the mayor of his city project remains stalled. But no. Unlike the Teatro Breton, courts have repeatedly Rita Barbera and reason is just the Zapatero government that insists on leaving the neighborhood as it is, as if defending cutrez the four liberals to use would be something of interest collective.
You see it is not comparable situations.
Therefore, to perpetuate the landscape bleak and Salamanca filthy than was once the iconic Teatro Breton, would leave it as is, with a sign explaining that he should put: "This is a monument to an era of neglect represented by arbitrary decisions municipal urban planning. "
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