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Thursday 3 December 2020 04:12

Rome bans horse-drawn carriages from city streets

Rome moves horse-drawn carriages to parks and offers botticelle drivers taxi licences in exchange.Rome has banned the traditional horse-drawn carriages from operating on the city's streets, ordering that the so-called botticelle can only circulate in public parks and historic villas.Under the new rules approved by the city assembly on 1 December, the horses must follow established routes, with stops scheduled every 45 minutes and for no more than seven hours a day. The animals will also not be allowed to circulate from midday until 17.30 in the hottest months of the year, July and August. In addition the city has offered the botticelle drivers the option to switch to a taxi license. TheĀ horse-drawn carriages are popularĀ with tourists - currently in scarce supply - and drivers have been known to charge ā‚¬100 per customer for a tour of the city's landmarks. The ban was welcomed by Rome mayor Virginia Raggi who wrote on her Facebook page: ā€œCarriages will no longer be able to circulate in the streets, in the traffic, but only inside the historic parks." AĀ botticelleĀ horse collapsed near Piazza Venezia in June 2016. The move, aimed at protecting the horses after years of debate over their well-being, was announced by the city in July 2019 with Raggi announcing at the time: "No more exhausted horses on the streets! Rome leader in safeguarding and protecting animals." The same news was also announced by the city in July 2018 when Raggi said the "historic" move would mean "no more tired horses forced to travel the city's streets among cars, under the sun." Italy: Horse dies pulling tourists at Royal Palace of Caserta However over the years the legislation has been met with fierce opposition from the carriage drivers who succeeded in blocking the measure through the courts, and are now reportedly preparing to challenge the latest move by the city. A botticelleĀ horse collapsed on Via del Corso in 2012. ā€œTrade in the parks will never be the same as the sort of business you can do in the city centre,ā€ said Angelo Sed, head ofĀ carriage drivers' associationĀ Nuova Associazione Vetturini Romani. Horse collapses near Rome's Spanish Steps Critics of the new order also point out that the animals will still have to make the journey through the streets from their stables in Testaccio to the city's parks. And, for animal rights' activists, the measures do not go far enough: they want theĀ botticelleĀ banned definitively, as promised by Raggi in her election campaign four years ago. 18-year-old Birillo died at work in 2008. Over the years there have been numerous clashes between carriage drivers and animal rights' activists who describe the city's streets as a "cruel" working environment for the horses, several of whom haveĀ collapsed and diedĀ under the strain of the summer heat. In 2008 an 18-year-old horse died while at work near the Colosseum. In 2012Ā an exhausted horse collapsed in Piazza di Spagna, under the strain of carrying six tourists in 40 degree heat. The driver attempted to beat theĀ animalĀ back to work and only ceased following the intervention of police. In 2014 aĀ horse collapsedĀ on Via del Corso, near Italy's parliament, after the driver claimed it slipped in oil, with the same thing happening near the Spanish Steps last October.

read the news on Wanted in Rome - News in Italy - Rome's local English news



Rome has banned the traditional horse-drawn carriages from operating on the city's streets, ordering that the so-called botticelle can only circulate in public parks and historic villas. Under the new rules approved by the city assembly on 1 December, the horses must follow established routes, with stops scheduled every 45 minutes and for no more than seven hours a day. The animals will also not be allowed to circulate from midday until 17.30 in the hottest months of the year, July and August. In addition the city has offered the botticelle drivers the option to switch to a taxi license. TheĀ horse-drawn carriages are popularĀ with tourists - currently in scarce supply - and drivers have been known to charge ā‚¬100 per customer for a tour of the city's landmarks. The ban was welcomed by Rome mayor Virginia Raggi who wrote on her Facebook page: ā€œCarriages will no longer be able to circulate in the streets, in the traffic, but only inside the historic parks."
AĀ botticelleĀ horse collapsed near Piazza Venezia in June 2016. The move, aimed at protecting the horses after years of debate over their well-being, was announced by the city
in July 2019
with Raggi announcing at the time: "No more exhausted horses on the streets! Rome leader in safeguarding and protecting animals." The same news was also announced by the city
in July 2018
when Raggi said the "historic" move would mean "no more tired horses forced to travel the city's streets among cars, under the sun."
  • Italy: Horse dies pulling tourists at Royal Palace of Caserta
However over the years the legislation has been met with fierce opposition from the carriage drivers who succeeded in blocking the measure through the courts, and are now reportedly preparing to challenge the latest move by the city.
A botticelleĀ horse collapsed on Via del Corso in 2012. ā€œTrade in the parks will never be the same as the sort of business you can do in the city centre,ā€ said Angelo Sed, head ofĀ carriage drivers' associationĀ Nuova Associazione Vetturini Romani.
  • Horse collapses near Rome's Spanish Steps
Critics of the new order also point out that the animals will still have to make the journey through the streets from their stables in Testaccio to the city's parks. And, for animal rights' activists, the measures do not go far enough: they want theĀ botticelleĀ banned definitively, as promised by Raggi in her election campaign four years ago.
18-year-old Birillo died at work in 2008. Over the years there have been numerous clashes between carriage drivers and animal rights' activists who describe the city's streets as a "cruel" working environment for the horses, several of whom haveĀ 
collapsed and died
Ā under the strain of the summer heat. In 2008 an 18-year-old horse died while at work near the Colosseum. In 2012Ā an exhausted horse collapsed in Piazza di Spagna, under the strain of carrying six tourists in 40 degree heat. The driver attempted to beat theĀ animalĀ back to work and only ceased following the intervention of police.
In 2014 aĀ 
horse collapsed
Ā on Via del Corso, near Italy's parliament, after the driver claimed it slipped in oil, with the same thing happening near the
Spanish Steps
last October.
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