Ventura (CISL) at the farewell step: “Concerned about Turin-Lyon as well as for FCA”

“What I find and that is also seen from Rome is a Piedmont with great potential as it has always been, but everything that has been basted has remained plastered”. “Beginning with the TAV, which is important for many, internationally, but especially for Piedmont, because passing here or there in the Alps changes a lot”. This is how the Turin Giovanna Ventura, from the CISL national secretariat and today in the city to participate in the Council General of CISL Piemonte to discuss issues such as the economic maneuver, but also major works and infrastructures.

But coming to Turin (from Rome) also requires a reflection on the Lingotto and its destinies. Especially after the sudden stop linked to future projects and investments. “We are very worried about the FCA for the Italian economy as well as for Piedmont alone, with direct and induced employees.We ask the government to avoid any kind of penalty or tax.It is clear that the future is electricity and sustainability. why do we not also follow measures on hydrogeological instability in respect of the environment? We start from the care and maintenance of the territory and then the electric car is well, but gradually “.

The future of Piedmont, however, will have to be done by wide-ranging plans: “On the industrial development should be resumed a path of attraction of investment that is a bit ‘stopped, as well as many other situations that affect our territory,” concludes Ventura .

Long-time manager of the Piedmontese CISL, of which she was general secretary from 2008 to 2014 before joining the national secretariat, Giovanna Ventura saw her last public appearance in Turin as a member of the Cisl national secretariat. Next December 20, in Rome, in addition to the formalization of the resignation as a confederal secretary, he will propose his appointment as president of the national Caf Cisl.

“My first objective will be to help people concretely, in everyday life, especially in the struggle with the bureaucracy”.

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