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Bathing park agreement: Now all valley communities are on board

2021-01-28T18:14:24.014Z


The dance is complete: after the communities of Kreuth and Gmund, Tegernsee and Rottach-Egern have now also approved the deficit agreement in relation to the bathing park. This means that all valley communities are on board.


The dance is complete: after the communities of Kreuth and Gmund, Tegernsee and Rottach-Egern have now also approved the deficit agreement in relation to the bathing park.

This means that all valley communities are on board.

  • Bad Wiessee relies on the financial support of its neighbors for the new bathing park

  • All Tegernsee Valley communities have now agreed to a deficit agreement

  • Most recently, there were unanimous resolutions in Rottach-Egern and Tegernsee

Tegernsee / Rottach-Egern

- In

Tegernsee

, the city councils were generally positive that Bad Wiessee would like to build a new pool.

The city councils were now familiar with the details of the agreement on a deficit in the swimming area.

They were not only roughly presented at a parliamentary group spokesman meeting in November in Bad Wiessee and then defined in more detail after this meeting.

It was clear that neither depreciation nor construction costs were taken into account in the agreement.

The distribution key is based primarily on tax strength and number of inhabitants

What was already explained at the council tables in Kreuth and Gmund was also discussed in Tegernsee - namely the exact key according to which the four valley communities divide an expected deficit: 45 percent of the deficit is calculated according to the tax strength per inhabitant, " in order to accommodate the economically not so strong community of Kreuth, ”explained treasurer Jürgen Mienert.

45 percent according to the number of inhabitants (Mienert: "Since the bathroom is essentially important for our citizens, especially for children and families").

Ten percent of the deficit is calculated according to the number of overnight stays ("because the pool is also used by our holiday guests as a bad weather offer").

Tegernsee contributes 25.19 percent to the deficit

In order to leave no room for speculation or imbalance, specific figures were also on the table in Tegernsee, which were derived from average calculations for the years 2017 to 2019.

Accordingly, Tegernsee has a share of the deficit of 25.19 percent.

For comparison: Gmund 26.82 percent, Kreuth 17.58 percent and Rottach-Egern 30.41 percent.

Tegernsee would be there with 62,975 euros.

“This number is variable, it is recalculated every year,” added Mayor Johannes Hagn (CSU).

Read here: Almost 88 percent in favor of demolition: clear yes to the new swimming pool building

The city councils in turn agreed to the agreement, which will be cast into a permanent contract by the end of the year.

Rudolf Gritsch (CSU) wanted to know whether they had also approached Waakirchen.

“They always claim that they belong to the valley,” said Gritsch.

“It would be an option to ask them.” You are of course very welcome, said Hagn, but this is not an issue at the moment, as the agreement was first discussed with the valley municipalities.

Rudolf Schertler (CSU) asked about a profit agreement.

“Does it then also run according to this key?” Hagn replied that the present agreement only refers to a deficit, nothing else.

The aim is to run the bathroom with a black zero.

Hagn demands a clean contract: "So that we don't get a casino number two"

Anton Lengmüller (FWG) welcomed the fact that the pool would once again be a leisure offer across the valley.

But he wanted to know exactly how the deficit we are talking about is made up.

“After all, we have our lake sauna.” Hagn assured that it was all about the swimming pool and that the agreement was about a fundamental statement.

"A precise contract must then be so clean that we won't get a casino number two in 30 years," said Hagn, referring to the dispute under the former mayor of Bad Wiesse about the subsequent participation of the valley communities in the new building of the casino.

Second mayor speaks of "extremely fair offer from Bad Wiessee"

Vice-Mayor Michael Bourjau (FWG) spoke of an “extremely fair offer from Bad Wiessee”.

The plans are optimistic, so that the Tegernsee share, which only relates to the operational losses, will be small.

"I am personally surprised by the offer, you can follow it well." Ursula Janssen (Greens) also thought it was a good thing to strengthen the valley together and to create an opportunity for the children to learn to swim.

It was a reminder of the time when Tegernsee also had an indoor swimming pool and had a deficit alone.

Florian Kohler (BürgerListe) regretted the fact that a deficit was assumed from the start.

Like Markus Schertler, he would like the municipalities to share in a profit.

Hagn gave little hope.

He also repeated the agreement that the total loss for the four valley communities was capped at 250,000 euros.

The offer that is on the table is “great”, said Hagn and added: “It exactly matches what we have been discussing in recent years.” The agreement was finally passed unanimously by the city council.

This is how the discussion in the Rottach municipal council went

In the

Rottach municipal council

, which had already voted in favor of the deficit agreement with Bad Wiessee in the non-public part of the December meeting, the most recent meeting was only about the distribution key.

As expected, the committee unanimously agreed.

This means that Rottach-Egern is involved with up to 76,000 euros.

Rescue organizers should be able to train in the Rottacher Warmbad

Mayor Christian Köck found that this was “not a bad offer”.

With the participation in Rottach, he explicitly wanted to see school sport and the training opportunities for the water rescue organizations recognized and also announced that they could hold their training in the Rottach warm and outdoor pool in the coming season and during the transition phase.

Alexandra Wurmser (CSU), who wanted to ensure that the DLRG and the water guards were given family-friendly training times in the new bathing park, even said: "We'll share it. Because we'll never get to an indoor pool that cheap again."

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Thomas Tomaschek (Greens) spoke not only of a “really fair agreement”, but also of a “good sign that we as valley communities can work well together”.

He hoped that this would also be the starting signal for further joint, valley-wide projects.

Thereupon Stefan Niedermaier (Blitz) envisioned a valley-wide association for all swimming pools in the valley.

Only Sepp Kaiser and Anton Maier (both CSU) clashed a little with the term of the deficit agreement of 30 years: Kaiser saw no incentive for the future operator to try to cover costs.

And Maier attached importance to the fact that the deficit agreement really only had to apply to the running costs and swimming.

gr / ak

Source: merkur

All news articles on 2021-01-28

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