The city of Barcelona is expected to pass a law on Friday to
curb tourism as visitors have begun to overwhelm the city and anger local
residents.
Last year the city’s 1.6 million residents were heavily
outnumbered by an estimated 32 million visitors, about half of them
day-trippers.
The new law comes after more than 25 years of relentless
promotion of the city as a tourist destination, and coincides with a planned
“occupation” on Saturday of La Rambla, a street that has come to symbolise what
many view as the excessive and unsustainable number of tourists.
The occupation has been organised by SOS Barcelona, an
umbrella group for some 40 residents and community associations.
Under the slogan “Barcelona isn’t for sale” the protesters
are calling for an end to property speculation, which is pricing residents out
of the city, and to low-wage jobs in tourist service industries.
“The tourist and restaurant sector is the worst paid in
Barcelona,” says Martà Cusó, a member of the group. “They earn half the average
salary.”
The new law, known as the special urban plan for tourist
accommodation, seeks to limit the number of beds on offer from hotels and
tourist apartments. It imposes a moratorium on building new hotels and a halt
in issuing licences for tourist apartments.
However, as a number of projects are already in the
pipeline, the plan is not expected to have an impact before 2019.
There are currently 75,000 hotel beds in the city and about
50,000 beds in legal tourist apartments, plus an estimated 50,000 illegal ones.
Residents’ associations calculate that some 17,000 flats are now tourist
apartments and that the resulting shortage has driven up rents that are now the
highest in Spain.
The proposal has met fierce opposition from the tourism
industry, which claims the law demonises tourists and says that limiting growth
can only hurt an already weak economy in a city where tourism accounts for
about 12% of the city’s €72bn (£61bn) GDP, according to figures for 2014.
“The focus of the plan is wrong,” insists Manel Casals,
director general of the Barcelona hoteliers association. “Of the 32 million
people who visited Barcelona last year, only 8 million stayed in hotels.
Twenty-three million were day-trippers who spend very little money in the city.
You’re not going to regulate tourism by limiting the number of beds. They’re
not regulating tourism, they’re only regulating where people sleep.”
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