President George Abela is to be commended for the challenge he
effectively laid at the Maltese populace’s feet yesterday morning when
he made the surprise announcement that the l-Istrina annual fund-raising
event will no longer be offering the prospect of prizes for those
calling in with donations.
The practice has to date constituted a serious blemish on an otherwise
altruistic and noble undertaking of lending a helping financial hand to
those less fortunate and in dire need of assistance.
Every year, what is intended as Malta’s biggest charity event descends
into a frenzy of prize giving, with supermarket trolleys – each replete
with dozens of desirable consumer items – not to mention the big prizes
of cars, cruises, flat screen televisions, are handed out with
increasing frequency as the deadline draws nearer.
To date, each year’s event degenerates into a frenzy of greed rather
than a demonstration of the Maltese people’s generosity and solidarity.
Nor can the telethon, in its past incarnations, be used as a gauge of
public generosity toward charitable causes – a misconception bandied
about very liberally in the wake of each and every L-Istrina.
Of course the move holds a number of risks and the final decision taken
by the President presents the people with a rather singular challenge to
rise to – to donate at least as much as in previous years but with the
full knowledge that there will be no reward, no chance of winning the
stacks of consumer prizes with monetary values far, far outweighing
their donations.
One wonders if there has been one instance in L-Istrina’s history of a
prize winner actually turning around and donating their prize winnings
back to the charities and claim the prizes were not the reason they
picked up the phone to donate – even though the telethons presenters’
pleas typically become frantic toward the end of the show, which usually
degenerates into a lottery of sorts – in the process all but completely
obfuscating the very raison d’être of the event.
The risk was surely a calculated one on the part of President Abela. In
his own words yesterday: “It was not an easy decision and we looked into
the risks, but I am convinced that people will prove that they believe
in the real value of solidarity and generosity without needing to be
awarded a prize in return.”
The decision, despite the risks to the Malta Community Chest Fund, which
the President heads and which since 2001 has been the beneficiary of
half the funds raised every year, is commendable and sends out a strong
message and one that is most befitting of the Office of the President –
that the event is about charity and solidarity with those less fortunate
and not about the thirst for prizes and the sating of consumerist greed.
Let us hope the people see it fit to rise to the President’s challenge
come December.
The real threat on the roads
While dangerous driving remains a menace that claims lives every year,
the real threat on Malta’s roads, which continually see the EU’s lowest
per capita death rate, is pollution and its far more intangible and
insidious health effects.
Malta has for a long time held something of a dubious record in the EU –
its car density. We were told repeatedly during the last general
election campaign that the country’s car density is by far Europe’s
highest, so much so that Europe’s second-highest car density, a position
held by The Netherlands, was actually some five times lower than that of
Malta.
That was in February 2008. Since then, and within the space of one year,
according to figures released this week, the number of newly licensed
vehicles has skyrocketed by over 40 per cent while the number of total
vehicles is a mere few hundred vehicles shy of the 300,000 mark.
Vehicle emissions are a leading source of air pollution and, in the same
vein, a leading source of the deterioration of the country’s air quality
– itself a major component of the much harped upon need to raise the
quality of life of those residing in Malta.
The neglect, highlighted recently by the Auditor General, on the part of
the Malta Transport Authority in testing vehicles citizens reported as
having particularly heavy exhaust levels, should serve as a wake-up call
for the authorities. And it has, with the promise that the situation is
to be rectified and that those reported are to be investigated
materialising soon after.
The recent news that the European Commission is considering infringement
proceedings against Malta with respect to PM10 traffic pollution is
another welcome move.
The recent and controversial shake up in the government’s registration
tax regime is, meanwhile, also a welcome move. Charging those importing
vehicles on the basis of their emissions as well as their size,
considering the myriad parking woes motorists suffer, is one laudable
initiative.
Another new way of cutting emissions, which we have heard very little of
since the last budget, are the plans to promote energy efficient driving
practices. Not only do such practices save drivers money at the fuel
pump, but logic also says that the less fuel a car uses, the less
exhaust it emits.
The initiatives, according to the National Energy Efficiency Action
Plan, which aims to foster an across the board three per cent energy
consumption cut by 2010, include the provision of advisory services on
energy saving measures, the dissemination of public information on
eco-driving through driving schools, vehicle repairers, car retailers
and at VRT test sites, and the development of an intelligent traffic
management system.
In the meantime, the government was to also investigate whether petrol
stations would be able to provide cost effective energy efficiency
services such as compressed air for tyres, information and/or engine
checks. Activities along such lines are, according to the plan, to begin
in 2009.
While such developments would certainly serve the country in good stead
in the longer term, what is needed is a solution on how to decrease the
numbers of vehicles on the roads, with the obvious result of cutting
emissions, in the shorter term.
The answer is in public transport and the painful reform process that is
about to kick off.
As with most things, the solution lies in a combination of measures and
not in one measure alone.
All the initiatives aimed at cutting Malta’s vehicle exhaust levels are
urgently needed and would be most welcome – not only by the present
generations but also by future generations who would look back at our
actions today and thank us for our, albeit somewhat belated, foresight.