Bear Spotted in Troyan’s Kapincho Park: Authorities Urge Caution
Residents of the Bulgarian town of Troyan reported a bear sighting near Kapincho Park, specifically on the stairs leading up to the park-hotel
Photo by Sofia Photo Agency
Workers from the Elma AD electric motor plant in the central Bulgarian city of Troyan are gearing up for civil disobedience due to unpaid salaries since 2008.
An initiative committee of former workers represented by Georgi Gachevski has sent a protest note to Prime Minister Boyko Borisov, Labor Minister Totyu Mladenov, Economy and Energy Minister Delyan Dobrev and Chief Prosecutor Boris Velchev, according to reports of the Bulgarian Telegraph Agency (BTA).
The note says that systematic delays in payments and partial payments started in 2002, while in 2008 the payment of salaries stopped altogether.
The workers received compensations from the the local Labor Office Directorate until mid-2010 but the situation of over 400 employees and their families has deteriorated to a critical level, according to the note.
Most of the unpaid sums amount to several thousand leva.
Over 150 employees of the plant have already won their cases in court and are waiting for the owner of the plant, Nikolay Banev, to pay them.
Elma AD Troyan is a legal successor of the former Elprom-Troyan plant, the biggest manufacturer of middle power electric motors on the Balkan Peninsula, which exported 85% of its output to over 40 countries.
Apart from Elma AD, six other major industrial companies owned by Banev are in a similar condition.
The workers of the Troyan-based plant threaten civil disobedience unless they get paid.
The first month following the introduction of the euro and the period of dual circulation with the lev has now ended, providing a clearer picture of how the transition is unfolding.
The annual campaign for filing personal income tax returns under Article 50 of the Personal Income Tax Act is underway
Two-room dwellings make up the largest portion of newly built homes in Bulgaria, according to data for the fourth quarter of 2025.
The Bulgarian National Bank reported that as of February 6, 2026, the withdrawal of lev banknotes and coins and their replacement with euro cash is progressing in line with the applicable legislation and the operational plans approved for the transition.
In 2024, about 68% of households across the European Union were owner-occupied, a slight decline from 69% in 2023, according to Eurostat data. The remaining 32% of the EU population lived in rented homes, up from 31% the previous year.
Retail trade in Bulgaria continued its strong momentum at the end of 2025, standing out among European Union countries as one of the top performers, according to Eurostat data.
Novinite 2025 in Review: A Year That Tested Bulgaria and the World
A Disgraceful Betrayal: Bulgaria's Shameful Entry into Trump's Board of Peace