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Culatra properties legalised after 150 years

culatraPortugal’s Environment Minister has announced the legalisation of 190 of 350 properties on the Ria Formosa island of Culatra whose owners had applied for permission.

So far, only ten licences have been granted by the munificent Minister, João Matos Fernandes, who braved the island last Friday with the Minister of the Sea, Ana Paula Vitorino.

Culatra residents now have their vital 'water resources licence,' which will be followed by the legalisation of their properties, after 150 years of technical illegality.

The descendants of the original settlers soon will be able to rest easy that Polis Litoral Ria Formosa will not arrive to bulldoze their properties.

The dwellings will be granted 30 year licences, renewable, as long as the homes remain as first homes.

The licences were delivered by the Ministers at a ceremony in Culatra, "These dwellings, which had existed for a long time - although they were in the Maritime Public Domain - had no title. What we did was, for clusters that have very relevant socioeconomic activity, to legalise the houses," explained João Matos Fernandes to a delighted home crowd, this election year.

This was made possible by "a decision taken by the Government, which amended the Water Act. We want traditional activities to continue in protected areas."

"This was a commitment of mine as a Minister,” added the normally evasive one.

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Comments  

0 #4 Poor Portuguesa 2019-07-02 14:11
Such a disgraceful consequence of illegal state bullying, not only discriminatory, but also again EU law.
+1 #3 Riverbank Williams 2019-06-25 15:59
As always Darcy entirely misses the point !
Now attention will switch to those not favoured with existence and how they will be eradicated without compensation. Both here and elsewhere along Portugal's coasts. Never forgetting those along or near river banks. How many more illegals will be found there and eradicated without compensation in the years to come? Bought and developed by north Europeans with many, since the 'new' coasts and riverbank legislation arrived, sold on with the buyers assumption, confirmed by a Pt lawyer, that the property was " totally legal". Us new north European buyers totally misled about the even now haphazard Portuguese property licensing regime.
+5 #2 Peter Booker 2019-06-25 08:43
It is also a prime example of divide and rule. What about the other 160 properties and their owners? And the title is also conditional, so long as they are first homes. So unless they sell to another fisherman, these houses are worthless.
-3 #1 Darcy 2019-06-25 07:09
This seems like a good solution to tricky problem !

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