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Noise, rubble and now also graffel

2020-05-22T16:53:18.467Z


Bayrischzell is actually a picture-perfect Bavaria. But not if you look at the wrong corners. There are rubble heaps and junk yards.


Bayrischzell is actually a picture-perfect Bavaria. But not if you look at the wrong corners. There are rubble heaps and junk yards.

Bayrischzell - The picturesque Wendelstein community of Bayrischzell is known to be regularly whitewashed for the camera in the ZDF television series "Frühling": beautiful geraniums against a tranquil mountain backdrop, lush meadows, picture-perfect Bavaria. But the idyll can be deceptive in some corners. The members of Hanno Acher (FWG) and Florian Müller (CSU) now complained about this in the municipal council. They are currently bothered by two flaws that do not fit into the townscape: a dusty and rubbish heap of rubble in the station car park and scrap-like cars that rust in various private parking lots without license plates.

Carrier Hanno Acher ("The situation is pretty wild") lives not far from the Bayrischzeller train station and not only sees the pile of rubble mentioned every day, but also has to sweep away the blown dirt in front of his front door and his company premises. The nerves of the neighbors of the emerging family hotel "Das Bayrischzell" by Pletzer Resorts GmbH (planned opening: end of July) are likely to be stressed anyway, because the work on the former AOK site is in full operation - dirt on Kranzerstrasse and parking company cars included . And the said pile of rubble is also a product of the construction work.

"The pile is not getting smaller, it is getting bigger," complained Acher, describing: "In the meantime, graffel has been thrown there at night because apparently it doesn't matter anyway." Acher therefore demands: "The dirt pile has to go ! “Also to clear more parking spaces in the station car park so that all company and delivery vehicles of construction site workers can park there again.

Also read: "Gamspark": Summer concept for the Sudelfeld becomes concrete

Müller often cycles through town or on foot. And the town council member spotted up to ten completely different "construction sites": "There are more deregistered and scrapped cars around." Müller cited places like the area at the former Oswald sawmill or on Schlierseer Strasse at the entrance to Bayrischzell. "It cannot be that a car stays around somewhere unannounced for several years," he emphasized, demanding fines.

Mayor Georg Kittenrainer (CSU) knows about the problem, because several citizens have already contacted him about it: Since the property is private, the municipality cannot intervene here, only admonish it in writing. But that usually doesn't help either: "We wrote a letter to the owner of the pointed property at the entrance to the town," Kittenrainer reported. "No answer has come to this day."

Garbage is annoying elsewhere too: “Saustall” on the container: the mayor is breathing his anger

The municipality, on the other hand, can take legal action for abandoned cars on public grounds or in the forest, said managing director Josef Acher and explained: “The district office then sticks an orange dot on the vehicle, which gives the keeper two months. Otherwise, this will be disposed of at a charge. "

Kittenrainer definitely wants to have the pile of rubble at the train station disposed of. The mayor announced that he would also write a letter on this - in the hope that the building owner would act on the request.

Daniel Wegscheider

Source: merkur

All news articles on 2020-05-22

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