The first good news is this: Cuneo was ranked seventh in national ranking on the quality of life in the Italian cities, compiled annually by the University of Rome La Sapienza.
The survey, reached the twelfth year, it assigns a score to each city by analyzing 9 elements environment, business and labor, crime, social problems and staff population, financial services and education system, health, leisure and living standards. Cuneo was in 7th place in Italy and first among the cities of Piedmont. In addition, the Great has won a position with respect to eighth place in 2009.
Another good news is that level of accessibility of the city of Cuneo . Cuneo was third in Italy as "accessible city " behind Parma and Reggio Emilia, in the context of a comparison involving 66 Italian cities over 50,000 inhabitants.
But what is meant by "Access City"?
This is the opportunities for disabled people to access, like the others, the physical environment, transport, technology and information systems and communications, as well as other services and facilities of the city. Improve accessibility for the disabled is one of the key actions of the European strategy on disability 2010-2020, adopted in November 2010.
Italian cities, however, are far from having adopted the maximum effort to improve its accessibility. No wonder, then, that in the ranking that compares each European city, the 3 Italian classificatesi the forefront nationally were at the extreme outside.
This is because Italy is still far from the parameters and standards of accessibility compared to European cities such as, for example, Barcelona, \u200b\u200bone of those awarded in Brussels during the European Day of People with Disabilities, held Dec. 3. The first prize of this new European recognition for the disabled-friendly city went to another English city, Avila, famous for its medieval walls. Awards also for the city of La Sagrada Familia, the German Colony and the Finnish Turku.
Another good news is that level of accessibility of the city of Cuneo . Cuneo was third in Italy as "accessible city " behind Parma and Reggio Emilia, in the context of a comparison involving 66 Italian cities over 50,000 inhabitants.
But what is meant by "Access City"?
This is the opportunities for disabled people to access, like the others, the physical environment, transport, technology and information systems and communications, as well as other services and facilities of the city. Improve accessibility for the disabled is one of the key actions of the European strategy on disability 2010-2020, adopted in November 2010.
Italian cities, however, are far from having adopted the maximum effort to improve its accessibility. No wonder, then, that in the ranking that compares each European city, the 3 Italian classificatesi the forefront nationally were at the extreme outside.
This is because Italy is still far from the parameters and standards of accessibility compared to European cities such as, for example, Barcelona, \u200b\u200bone of those awarded in Brussels during the European Day of People with Disabilities, held Dec. 3. The first prize of this new European recognition for the disabled-friendly city went to another English city, Avila, famous for its medieval walls. Awards also for the city of La Sagrada Familia, the German Colony and the Finnish Turku.
The town of Cuneo is not new to awards on accessibility: In 2001, Cuneo was "Sustainable City girls and children."
In 2008, he received an award for "Family Friendly City", which was reflected in a premium of € 30 thousand retired to Rome directly from the hands of Romano Prodi.
In 2007, a prize to Bologna for the ability to remove architectural barriers.
course, for the administration, reaching the final in Brussels and being cut off after all this hard work has not been great, but just think how other cities are tanned - I think for example in Naples and the new architectural barrier made from waste - to consider the performance Cuneo truly remarkable!
In 2008, he received an award for "Family Friendly City", which was reflected in a premium of € 30 thousand retired to Rome directly from the hands of Romano Prodi.
In 2007, a prize to Bologna for the ability to remove architectural barriers.
course, for the administration, reaching the final in Brussels and being cut off after all this hard work has not been great, but just think how other cities are tanned - I think for example in Naples and the new architectural barrier made from waste - to consider the performance Cuneo truly remarkable!
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