Hipermarkety bez zezwoleń
ZMIANA PRAWA - Są trzy projekty ustaw w sprawie budowy hipermarketów. LiD i PO domagają się uchylenia ustawy o ich tworzeniu i działaniu, natomiast PiS chce złagodzić rygory procedury ubiegania się o zezwolenie.
Posłowie PO chcą, aby nowa ustawa weszła w życie już w dniu ogłoszenia jej w Dzienniku Ustaw, natomiast projekt LiD przewiduje wejście w życie nowych regulacji po 14 dniach od ogłoszenia. Zgłoszony wczoraj do laski marszałkowskiej projekt PiS przewiduje nowelizację ustawy o WOH, ograniczając m.in. wpływ samorządów na decydowanie o ich tworzeniu.
Uprzywilejowane sklepy
PO uważa, że obowiązująca ustawa spowoduje zachwianie równowagi rozwoju sektora handlu poprzez uprzywilejowanie mniejszych sklepów, faktycznie ich nie chroniąc, gdyż duże sieci mogą zmienić strategię i stać się konkurencją dla drobnego handlu. Natomiast LiD kwestionuje zasadę odpowiedzialności karnej przedsiębiorcy, który uzyskał zezwolenie, za czyny popełnione przez najemców, dzierżawców i innych użytkownikach powierzchni w WOH. Uważa, że proces uzyskania pozwoleń przewidziany w ustawie przewiduje rażąco długie terminy, podczas których organy administracyjne muszą wywiązać się ze swoich obowiązków. Rady gminy i sejmiki wojewódzkie mają też nieograniczoną swobodę w zakresie wyrażania zgody lub odmowy, co może prowadzić do korupcji.
Prostsze procedury
Posłowie PiS chcą tylko nowelizacji ustawy i proponują uproszczenie procedur. Zmiany miałyby umożliwić każdemu prowadzącemu działalność gospodarczą wystąpienie z wnioskiem o utworzenie hipermarketu.
- W projekcie nowelizacji proponujemy też, aby przed wydaniem zezwolenia nie trzeba było zasięgać opinii sejmiku wojewódzkiego - tłumaczy poseł Grzegorz Tobiszewski (PiS).
Rada gminy będzie zasięgała opinii w organizacjach samorządowych przedsiębiorców. Przyznany im zostanie trzytygodniowy termin na wydanie opinii. W razie jego niedotrzymania będzie się przyjmować, że opinia jest pozytywna. Takie rozwiązanie ma przyspieszyć procedurę.
Maksymalna powierzchnia
- We wniosku trzeba będzie zamieścić tylko informację o powierzchni maksymalnej i całkowitej, natomiast nie będzie konieczne podawanie powierzchni infrastruktury towarzyszącej - dodaje poseł.
MaŁgorzata Piasecka-Sobkiewicz
Thursday, February 21, 2008
Tuesday, February 19, 2008
David Wolfe's Agricultural Research Station in Hawaii
David Wolfe's Agricultural Research Station in Hawaii Part1
Videos Channels David Wolfe's Agricultural Research Station in Hawaii Part 2
David Wolfe's Agricultural Research Station in Hawaii Part 3
David Wolfe's Agricultural Research Station in Hawaii Part 4
Videos Channels David Wolfe's Agricultural Research Station in Hawaii Part 2
David Wolfe's Agricultural Research Station in Hawaii Part 3
David Wolfe's Agricultural Research Station in Hawaii Part 4
organic bee ///(2)おそうじ その1
organic bee ///(2)おそうじ その1
台灣宏觀電視TMACTV--女王蜂:李麗玉
Best of the Best Great Video
Gradual from Wolrd Best Beekeepeing School 1986 Poland
Alex Lech Bajan
CEO
RAQport.com
2004 North Monroe Street
Arlington Virginia 22207
Washington DC Area
USA
TEL: 703-528-0114
TEL2: 703-652-0993
FAX: 703-940-8300
sms: 703-485-6619
EMAIL: office@raqport.com
WEB SITE: http://raqport.com
Best of the Best Great Video
Gradual from Wolrd Best Beekeepeing School 1986 Poland
Alex Lech Bajan
CEO
RAQport.com
2004 North Monroe Street
Arlington Virginia 22207
Washington DC Area
USA
TEL: 703-528-0114
TEL2: 703-652-0993
FAX: 703-940-8300
sms: 703-485-6619
EMAIL: office@raqport.com
WEB SITE: http://raqport.com
台灣宏觀電視TMACTV--女王蜂:李麗玉
Best of the Best Great Video
Gradual from Wolrd Best Beekeepeing School 1986 Poland
Alex Lech Bajan
CEO
RAQport.com
2004 North Monroe Street
Arlington Virginia 22207
Washington DC Area
USA
TEL: 703-528-0114
TEL2: 703-652-0993
FAX: 703-940-8300
sms: 703-485-6619
EMAIL: office@raqport.com
WEB SITE: http://raqport.com
Best of the Best Great Video
Gradual from Wolrd Best Beekeepeing School 1986 Poland
Alex Lech Bajan
CEO
RAQport.com
2004 North Monroe Street
Arlington Virginia 22207
Washington DC Area
USA
TEL: 703-528-0114
TEL2: 703-652-0993
FAX: 703-940-8300
sms: 703-485-6619
EMAIL: office@raqport.com
WEB SITE: http://raqport.com
Natural Holistic Medicine and Bee Honey
Natural Holistic Medicine and Bee Honey
Honey and Health Symposium Trailer
Raw Honey Cilantro Persimmon Salad Luci Lock Mercola.com
Cough Medicine or Honey?
Topical Honey for Diabetic Foot Ulcers
BAGHDAD — When Adil Hashim was a youngster, he planned to become an engineer. However, all that changed when he was 17 years old.
Then he "saw a group of bees gathering like a bunch of grapes on the lemon tree in our garden," Hashim recalls.
Transfixed, Hashim sought help from his neighbor, who knew about beekeeping. As they spoke, Hashim became fascinated. So instead of engineering, he went to study beekeeping at Baghdad University's College of Agriculture.
Today, Hashim, 35, has a computer shop, but he still maintains beehives at his house. And he's hardly unique. Beekeeping is an Iraqi tradition dating to ancient times and one of the country's favorite hobbies. Many Iraqis have hives in their gardens.
Honey factors into many traditional Arabic meals, especially at holiday time. The holy Quran talks about the health benefits of honey.
"Beekeeping has been there for 5,000 years," says Malcolm Sanford, professor emeritus at the University of Florida who went to Iraq this year to study the country's beekeeping industry.
It's "where it kind of started," Sanford says.
Iraq's honey industry fell on hard times during the reign of Saddam Hussein.
One of Baghdad's largest beekeeping centers, just south of Baghdad in Rashidiya, was closed and converted to a military base in 1992 by Saddam's Republican Guards. By 2002, government support for the industry had nearly vanished, and exports were virtually zero.
Now, Iraqi beekeepers are trying to revive their decrepit industry. With money from the U.S. Agency for International Development, carpenters are being trained to build efficient apiaries.
Abdul Razaq, who works at a beekeeping center in the Baghdad suburb of Abu Ghraib, says Iraq's honey production has the potential to become one of the country's largest industries.
Iraqi beekeepers got together and created a trade association last year. It now has 50 members. A small laboratory has been re-established at Rashidiya to supply queen bees.
Not surprisingly, Iraqis are honey gourmets.
"I like to have honey on my table," says Laith Faris, 40, a customer at the beekeepers association's retail shop.
"It's so difficult to know the quality of the honey ... whether it is pure or fake. And it is very expensive. So I prefer to buy it (directly) from the society," he says.
Contributing: Mona Mahmoud is in Baghdad, Michael Hartigan in McLean, Va.
Alex Lech Bajan
Gradual from Wolrd Best Beekeepeing School 1986 in Poland
CEO
RAQport Inc.
2004 North Monroe Street
Arlington Virginia 22207
Washington DC Area
USA
TEL: 703-528-0114
TEL2: 703-652-0993
FAX: 703-940-8300
sms: 703-485-6619
EMAIL: office@raqport.com
WEB SITE: http://raqport.com
Honey and Health Symposium Trailer
Raw Honey Cilantro Persimmon Salad Luci Lock Mercola.com
Cough Medicine or Honey?
Topical Honey for Diabetic Foot Ulcers
BAGHDAD — When Adil Hashim was a youngster, he planned to become an engineer. However, all that changed when he was 17 years old.
Then he "saw a group of bees gathering like a bunch of grapes on the lemon tree in our garden," Hashim recalls.
Transfixed, Hashim sought help from his neighbor, who knew about beekeeping. As they spoke, Hashim became fascinated. So instead of engineering, he went to study beekeeping at Baghdad University's College of Agriculture.
Today, Hashim, 35, has a computer shop, but he still maintains beehives at his house. And he's hardly unique. Beekeeping is an Iraqi tradition dating to ancient times and one of the country's favorite hobbies. Many Iraqis have hives in their gardens.
Honey factors into many traditional Arabic meals, especially at holiday time. The holy Quran talks about the health benefits of honey.
"Beekeeping has been there for 5,000 years," says Malcolm Sanford, professor emeritus at the University of Florida who went to Iraq this year to study the country's beekeeping industry.
It's "where it kind of started," Sanford says.
Iraq's honey industry fell on hard times during the reign of Saddam Hussein.
One of Baghdad's largest beekeeping centers, just south of Baghdad in Rashidiya, was closed and converted to a military base in 1992 by Saddam's Republican Guards. By 2002, government support for the industry had nearly vanished, and exports were virtually zero.
Now, Iraqi beekeepers are trying to revive their decrepit industry. With money from the U.S. Agency for International Development, carpenters are being trained to build efficient apiaries.
Abdul Razaq, who works at a beekeeping center in the Baghdad suburb of Abu Ghraib, says Iraq's honey production has the potential to become one of the country's largest industries.
Iraqi beekeepers got together and created a trade association last year. It now has 50 members. A small laboratory has been re-established at Rashidiya to supply queen bees.
Not surprisingly, Iraqis are honey gourmets.
"I like to have honey on my table," says Laith Faris, 40, a customer at the beekeepers association's retail shop.
"It's so difficult to know the quality of the honey ... whether it is pure or fake. And it is very expensive. So I prefer to buy it (directly) from the society," he says.
Contributing: Mona Mahmoud is in Baghdad, Michael Hartigan in McLean, Va.
Alex Lech Bajan
Gradual from Wolrd Best Beekeepeing School 1986 in Poland
CEO
RAQport Inc.
2004 North Monroe Street
Arlington Virginia 22207
Washington DC Area
USA
TEL: 703-528-0114
TEL2: 703-652-0993
FAX: 703-940-8300
sms: 703-485-6619
EMAIL: office@raqport.com
WEB SITE: http://raqport.com
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