123 fines for environmental pollutants, 100 of them in Pristina

The organisation "Let's Do It's" reports that it has continued monitoring the implementation of the Administration Guide for Joba Mandatore by municipal and central inspectors and the pronunciation of fines for pollutants. According to monitoring data, compared to the past two months, in January the largest number of fines have been imposed by environmental inspectors. Throughout [...]
The organisation "Let's Do It's" reports that it has continued monitoring the implementation of the Administration Guide for Joba Mandatore by municipal and central inspectors and the pronunciation of fines for pollutants. According to monitoring data, compared to the past two months, in January the largest number of fines have been imposed by environmental inspectors. Over the course of the month, 123 fines have been imposed in all Kosovo municipalities, compared to December, where 84 fines were submitted and November 89 fines.
This time again, this organisation reports, the list of municipalities with mostly pronounced fines leads the Pristina municipality, with 100. Pristina had been the municipality that had distributed mostly fines for pollutants, even in November [35] and December [25].
On the January list, in second place for mostly fines pronounced for environmental pollutants are the Decani and Malisheva municipality, with 6 fines imposed by inspectors.
The list continues with the Peja municipality, where four fines have been imposed for polluting, and Prizren's Suhareka municipality and two fines for pollutants.
From a fine has been pronounced in municipalities such as Mitrovica, Istog and Kamenica.
And in municipalities, like: Fushe Kosovo, Obilic, Skenderaj, Podujevo, Vushtrri, Ferizaj, Gjilan, Year, Kacanik, Hani of Elez, Gjakova, Kline, Rahovec, Junik, Shpe, Lipjan and Drenas has not been pronounced a single fine for environmental pollutants during January by environmental inspectors.
No fine for the month has even been pronounced by environmental and Spatial Planning Ministry inspectors.
From monitoring data it turns out that the most frequent type of fines pronounced was that of throwing waste and building materials outside certain locations.
During January, some of the problems identified by inspectors for implementing this Administrative Guide have been climate conditions, which have been unable to get to the ground and the pronunciation of fines, the annual vacation of inspectors, the lack of vehicles that need inspectors to conduct inspection, as well as the lack of blocks for the pronunciation of fines.
However, the fact remains that inspectors report that sometimes they cannot pronounce fines because of the closeness of polluting.
Administrator's Administrator Guide for Mandatore was signed during the “Field. To clean Kosovo”, and it is aimed at reducing and eliminating environmental pollution and human health, protecting public and private surfaces through waste management.
Let's Do It will announce that monitoring the implementation of the Administrator Guide will continue the following months, when all data will be released.











