Thessaloniki gets ready for its metro launch in November
The underground rapid transit lines have been under construction for almost two decades due to various project delays
According to the Ministry of Health, vaccine mandate has had little effect on the vaccination rate
After the Austrian government decided to lift most anti-Covid measures, last weekend saw citizens flocking to restaurants, bars and clubs across the country in what some club-owners have described as spring fever. People no longer need any type of health pass to enter crowded venues and, on top of that, the curfew has also gone away.
According to the ORF, the Austrian national broadcasting agency, Klaus Friedl, chairman of the gastronomy section of the Styrian Chamber of Commerce, explained that the sector is seeing a full spring awakening. He also explained that the catering industry hopes that will see a full recovery by mid-2023.
This, however, creates a contradiction with Austria’s mandatory Covid-shot policy and a situation where it will be very hard to enforce it. Notably, in the past, authorities used pandemic restrictions and the Green Certificate as a way to distinguish the unvaccinated. With measures going away that will become much harder.
At the same time, according to the Ministry of Health, the mandate has had very little effect on vaccination rates and there are a million adults in the country, who are subject to a fine. Now, the government is set to decide whether to drop portions of the mandate.
While pandemic restrictions in Austria were lifted on the federal level, the states still have some autonomy when implementing the measure on the local level. Most notably, authorities in Vienna have decided that a full lift on mask, vaccine and recovery rules would be a premature decision for the city.
Nevertheless, last weekend thousands of people waited for hours in sub-zero temperatures to be the first to enter nightclubs. At the same time, Vienna mayor Michael Ludwig explained that Covid-infections were still too high to introduce a blanket loosening of pandemic measures, as the ORF reported.
Consequently, people going to restaurants, bars and nightclubs will have to provide a valid vaccination or recovery certificate and masks will still be mandatory in retail. At the same time, many Viennese decided to go and party in the neighbouring federal state of Lower Austria.
Notably, Austria is the only country to have introduced a vaccine mandate for COVID-19. However, since the mandate came into force, in February, according to the Ministry of Health, vaccination numbers have not changed significantly.
At the start of last month, there were 1.3 million adults without a valid Green Certificate in Austria, meaning that they were not vaccinated or recovered. Now that number has dropped to 972,289, however, most of that drop is due to the 404,000 people who have had the disease in that period. According to government data, only 60,765 people have had their jab.
On 8 March, the government-appointed commission to evaluate compulsory vaccination is scheduled to present its first report. Lawmakers will use that to decide whether violations will be sanctioned from mid-March.
The underground rapid transit lines have been under construction for almost two decades due to various project delays
Now you can get your wine in Talence by paying directly in Bitcoin
That’s because the state has to spend money on updating the railway infrastructure rather than subsidizing the cost of the popular pass
Rethinking renewable energy sources for the urban landscape
The examples, compiled by Beyond Fossil Fuels, can inform and inspire communities and entrepreneurs that still feel trepidation at the prospect of energy transition
Now you can get your wine in Talence by paying directly in Bitcoin
The 10th European Conference on Sustainable Cities and Towns (ESCT) sets the stage for stronger cooperation between the EU, national and local level to fast track Europe's transition to climate neutrality.
At least, that’s the promise made by the mayor of Paris, Anne Hidalgo
The underground rapid transit lines have been under construction for almost two decades due to various project delays
At least, that’s the promise made by the mayor of Paris, Anne Hidalgo
Hostal de Pinós is located in the geographical centre of the autonomous region
Despite its church-y name, the district has long been known as the hangout spot for the artsy crowds
Urban dwellers across the EU are having a say in making their surroundings friendlier to people and the environment.
Forests in the EU can help green the European construction industry and bolster a continent-wide push for architectural improvements.
Apply by 10 November and do your part for the transformation of European public spaces
An interview with the Mayor of a Polish city that seeks to reinvent itself
An interview with the newly elected ICLEI President and Mayor of Malmö
A conversation with the Mayor of Lisbon about the spirit and dimensions of innovation present in the Portuguese capital