Housing emergency, integrated water service and above all healthcare: the center-right is aiming for an “omnibus law”, yet another presented for approval in the Regional Council, for a series of regulatory changes. The proposal was filed under the signature of the councilors Giuseppe Graziano (UDC), Francesco De Nisi (Coraggio Italia), Giacomo Pietro Crinò and Michele Comito (Forza Italia), Luciana De Francesco (Fratelli d’Italia) and Giuseppe Gelardi (Lega)which deal with delicate subjects in ten articles. More than once the opposition has contested the choice to put everything in one cauldron: we can be sure that this time too there will be no shortage of controversy already in the commission. The bill modifies and integrates a series of regional laws «with the aim – explains the introductory report – of making them more responsive to the evolution of the new regional political-administrative context or adapting them to the Government’s prescriptions, in execution of the commitments specifically undertaken, in context of the principle of loyal collaboration between the State and the Regions, as well as also providing for regulatory provisions”. A valid premise… for all seasons.
The super commissioner
The majority of the articles of the bill are dedicated to healthcare. Starting from the first, which deals with companies dissolved by the mafia (the latest case in Vibo, but in the past it happened in Reggio and Catanzaro): «In order to guarantee the gradual transition to the ordinary management of the health companies dissolved pursuant to the Article 146 of Legislative Decree 18 August 2000 n. 267, for the five-year period following the termination of the commissionership, an extraordinary commissioner may be appointed, chosen, also from the national list, among subjects with proven competence and experience, in particular in matters of healthcare organization or business management, also in quiescence”. The objective of the initiative would be, as the proponents explain, to guarantee “a gradual return to ordinariness for dissolved companies”, a requirement that would arise “from the need to recover the reputation of the dissolved body, which can be satisfied through the appointment of a commissioner extraordinary person of high professionalism, whose professional career can re-establish the community’s sense of trust in the institutions”.