‘No permit needed’ for valley pathway works, says PA
newsare.net
Rural pathways leading to Lunzjata Valley, in the limits of Santa Katerina, a hamlet in Rabat, are being given a concrete surface and the Planning Authority says no permits are required. Rabat residents who frequently go for walks along these secluded rural‘No permit needed’ for valley pathway works, says PA
Rural pathways leading to Lunzjata Valley, in the limits of Santa Katerina, a hamlet in Rabat, are being given a concrete surface and the Planning Authority says no permits are required. Rabat residents who frequently go for walks along these secluded rural passageways tipped off Times of Malta about the works in progress. A visit revealed heavy machinery on site. These included milling and rock-cutting equipment as well as ready-mix trucks laying fresh concrete on a wire mesh. “This area is completely unspoilt and is only used by farmers and some ramblers who frequently visit the 17th century chapel and retreat house there,” a shocked resident said. “We could not believe what we were seeing when trucks fully loaded with concrete kept coming and going as machinery chipped off the rocks to widen the passageways,” another resident said. When it went on site following the tip-off, the Times of Malta saw a group of employees from a local contractor working on a two-kilometre-long stretch of rural roads in the middle of the valley. The works are being done not far from the controversial residence of Transport Minister Ian Borg, who is politically responsible for both road building... Read more