Sunday, March 31 – Weekend Round-Up

Sunday, March 31 – Weekend Round-Up

Sun, Mar 31st 2024

Swiss municipalities offering the best cost of living, the diplomatic nuances of Switzerland’s stance on global matters, and the rising healthcare demands.

Keystone/GIAN EHRENZELLER

The most favorable municipalities, Switzerland’s diplomatic restraint and the high demands of patients: This and more can be found in the Sunday newspapers. The headlines in unverified reports:

NZZ am Sonntag: Municipality Cost

Medium-sized Swiss municipalities fared best in an evaluation of the cost of living. In addition to low rents and purchase prices for real estate, these municipalities also offer advantages in terms of taxes, health insurance premiums and local infrastructure, as the “NZZ am Sonntag” wrote based on an evaluation by the consulting firm Wüest und Partner.

The best-placed municipalities were located in the agglomeration or on the Central Plateau along the A1 highway between Fribourg and eastern Switzerland. In German-speaking Switzerland, Ried near Kerzers FR came out on top. The accessibility of the place of residence was also included in the evaluation. Remote municipalities in the cantons of Graubünden, Valais and Ticino were at the bottom of the rating.

SonntagsBlick: Who Killed Navalny?

Switzerland has refused to name Russian President Vladimir Putin as the person responsible for the death of opposition activist Alexey Navalny. All other EFTA states, EU states and the USA have endorsed a corresponding resolution text from the UN Human Rights Council, as SonntagsBlick wrote.

SonntagsBlick: Defence Lawyers

The Department of Defence has earmarked eight million Swiss francs for external lawyers over the next eight years. The cost ceiling includes legal support for the department in connection with upcoming procurement projects, as a spokeswoman for the Federal Department of Defence, Civil Protection and Sport (DDPS) told “SonntagsBlick”.

SonntagsBlick: SVP Youth

The Young SVP’s strategy chief Sarah Regez took part in a secret meeting with the Austrian right-wing extremist Martin Sellner. The meeting took place in a small circle in May 2023, according to SonntagsBlick. Members of the far-right group “Junge Tat” were mainly present.

Shortly before the secret meeting, the SVP Baselland put Regez on the main list for the National Council elections. If Regez was successful in the elections: she would move up should someone from the previous SVP representation leave the National Council. Regez did not respond to several contacts from the editorial team.

SonntagsZeitung: Healthcare Costs Rising

According to three hospital bosses, the high demands of patients have led to cost increases in the healthcare sector. Premiums are still too low for what is being consumed, the heads of the hospitals in Baden, Biel and Chur said in unison, according to the SonntagsZeitung. “We can hardly cope with the demand in all our consultation hours,” said Hugo Keune from the Cantonal Hospital of Graubünden.

“We had headache patients in an emergency who threatened to sue if they didn’t get an MRI immediately,” Adrian Schmitter from Baden Cantonal Hospital. High electricity and food costs also got out of hand. The different cantons handling of hospital deficits would also lead to inequalities: “In one canton, the government helps, in another, hospitals are closed,” said Kristian Schneider from Zentrumsspital Biel.

SonntagsZeitung: Tear It Out

Swisscom is planning to tear up 3200 kilometers of roads due to a legal dispute. Under pressure from the Swiss Federal Competition Commission (ComCo), the telecoms provider adjusted its plans for fiber optic connections before a final decision was made, as the SonntagsZeitung newspaper reported.

The Competition Commission demanded that every Swiss household should have a separate fiber optic connection instead of supplying districts as a whole. This should not distort competition. According to the newspaper, 3200 kilometers correspond to four times the distance between Bern and Hamburg as the crow flies.

Experts anticipate additional costs of two billion Swiss francs. According to Swisscom, there is no additional benefit for end customers. According to the SonntagsZeitung, the legal dispute between the Competition Commission and Swisscom is likely to last for years.

SonntagsZeitung: Heritage Protection

The marina project by Egyptian investor Samih Sawiris in Isleten UR violates nature and heritage protection laws. The area is located in a protected landscape, as the SonntagsZeitung wrote. The legal situation is so clear that the project will never happen. The federal government and cantons must ensure that the natural and cultural landscape character of these areas is preserved. Interventions are only permitted if they are opposed by at least equivalent interests that are also of national importance.

Neither Sawiris nor the cantonal government of Uri, which supports the project, had commissioned an environmental and building law report in advance. Two legal experts contacted by the newspaper assumed that Sawiris would not be able to implement his project.

Le Matin Dimanche: Minimum Wages

The cantons want to give cantonal minimum wages priority over collective labor agreements. In doing so, they are opposing the parliament’s plan, which prioritizes collective employment contracts, as “Le Matin Dimanche” wrote.

The draft law “encroaches heavily on the autonomy of the cantons” and “overrides certain decisions made by the people”, according to statements from the cantonal conference of economics ministers and the conference of social affairs directorates.

The draft is out for consultation until Monday. The national government has already called on parliament to reject the draft as it violates several fundamental principles of the Swiss legal system.

©Keystone/SDA

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