Bulgaria's Hotel Sector Faces Workforce Shortages and High Taxes Ahead of 2025 Season
Veselin Danev, chairman of the Bulgarian Hotel Association, highlighted a major issue in Bulgaria’s tourism sector: a significant decline in the workforce
All opinions received so far at the Bulgarian Justice Ministry in connection with a reform of the judicial map proposed by the Supreme Judicial Council (SJC) are negative, the Ministry said on Monday during a discussion it organized on accessible and effective justice.
The radical reform in question, known as Version 4, envisages the closure of a large number of small regional courts countrywide (113 altogether) and their conversion into territorial divisions of the nearest larger courts. The types of cases under the jurisdiction of regional courts will be reduced. District courts will examine cases at the first instance, and appellate courts at the second instance. Part of the judges will be transferred to higher courts. Territorial divisions may try cases by video conference, or a judge will sit on site. The idea is to cut costs, but litigants may have to invest a lot more time and money to appear before a faraway court.
Caretaker Justice Minister Yanaki Stoilov said that "the lower a court, the more significant social role it plays" and that the
reform version "gives rise to more questions than it solves".
Deputy Justice Minister Maria Pavlova said that opinions from municipal councils and mayors of dozens of settlements, from the
Supreme Bar Council of Bulgaria and the Notary Chamber have been sent and continue to arrive at the Ministry. More than 500
judges have signed an objection to the proposed reform and have sent it to the SJC.
Silvia Georgieva of the National Association of Municipalities argued that local communities, too, should be consulted about the judicial map reform. She said that this discussion is part of the debate about the depopulation and development of the
regions which engaged in similar discussions on keeping their hospitals and schools. In her words, some regions are being gradually deprived of essential public services.
According to lawyer Valya Gigova of the Supreme Bar Council, the debate is overdue and should have taken place when the reform versions were drawn up. In her opinion, the number of regional courts should be optimized but their jurisdiction should be
broadened. The experience of the prosecution service should be tapped, Gigova said, adding that after the number of prosecution
services was optimized, prosecutors have had difficulties in the progress and administration of their cases.
Lawyer Ina Loulcheva said that if their access to justice is restricted, people will take the law into their own hands and
arbitrariness will rule. In her words, judicial proceedings have a reformative and deterrent effect and the transfer of a large
number of case types to the district court will erode the public credibility of justice. The publicity of court hearings would be limited if they are held by video conference, she argued.
Most discussants pointed out that the judicial map reform does not concern the judicial system alone and should be submitted to
a broad public and political debate. The reform could use elements of several of the versions proposed so far.
Public discussions on the reform will be held shortly, after which the SJC will draft legislative amendments and will submit
them to Parliament.
"Everyone wants positions – in regulatory bodies and ministries," he emphasized.
Bulgaria’s toll system now has the technical capability to track average vehicle speeds, as announced by the National Toll Management following a meeting with Regional Development Minister Violeta Koritarova.
The income required to cover living expenses for a working individual and a three-member family with a child under 14 has remained almost unchanged compared to June, according to an analysis by the Confederation of Independent Trade Unions in Bulgaria (CI
The Council of Ministers has adopted a resolution to set the minimum wage at 1,077 leva, reflecting a 15.
Every 20 minutes, fire alerts are received from across Bulgaria.
I feel no moral guilt towards anyone. This was stated by Kiril Petkov, answering a question whether he would apologize to the Bulgarian people for violating the Constitution.
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