Weekly review no. 58
29.11.2024
Food collection helps those in need
Last Saturday, food banks replenished their stocks with a large-scale food collection. Customers, especially in supermarkets, can put part of their purchases in collection bins set up by the food banks. In particular, the banks were able to collect long-life foodstuffs such as rice, UHT milk, tinned meat and pasta. A total of 640 tons of goods were donated throughout the Czech Republic. Donations can still be made via online markets until December 3.
The food banks in the Czech Republic are comparable to the food banks in Germany. However, the banks do not pass on their donations directly to those in need, but through other charitable organizations. Both the number of people in need and the number of organizations involved is constantly increasing. At the Ústí District Food Bank based in Litoměřice, the number of partner organizations increased by 5 to 60 this year.
At the same time, the volume of food collected is also increasing. This comes not only from supermarkets, which are obliged to hand over food that is past its sell-by date to the banks, but also from farmers, who are obliged to donate some of their produce, the growth of which was supported by state subsidies, either in kind or in cash. Additional food also comes from Saxony from the Sächsische Tafel, with which the food bank in Litoměřice has been cooperating for some time.
The next food collection is planned for spring.
Czech regional transport to become more expensive
Bad news for users of regional transport in the north Bohemian district of Ústí. From January, prices for buses and trains will rise by an average of 15 percent. This is still a moderate increase, as inflation in the Czech Republic has been around 24 percent in the last two years.
According to the district administration, this is purely an adjustment to inflation. "We do this every two years with a view to the price trend over the last 18 months," says Tomáš Rieger, District Councillor for Transport. As a result, all prices increase, from one-way tickets to network tickets and season tickets for certain routes. The price of the annual ticket for the entire Ústí district alone remains unchanged at 18,000 crowns (720 euros). Regional transport costs 3 billion crowns (120 million euros) a year. The district would like to cover a third of this with income from ticket sales and the state subsidy.
Before that, there will be some improvements. The new bus timetable from December 1 and the new rail timetable from mid-December will mean more frequent connections on some routes. There will be improvements to bus services beyond the district boundaries in particular. For example, there will be more direct buses from Varnsdorf via Nový Bor and Česká Lípa to Prague, so that in future there will be a bus to Prague every hour, and even every half hour during rush hour. On some routes, such as from Krupka, Dubí and Duchcov to the spa town of Teplice, departure times will change to ensure connections to trains from Teplice main station.
The district has also improved the DÚKapka transport app. A German language version was recently introduced. This allows German users to conveniently buy tickets or search for a connection. Another new feature is that tickets that have been purchased but not yet activated can be returned.
However, no new trains or buses have been introduced. Quite the opposite. In the course of the new timetable, Czech Railways České dráhy (ČD) will replace the modern Regiopanter trains with old double-decker trains from GDR production. In future, the modern trains will run in the Pardubice district in Eastern Bohemia, where ČD was obliged to use modern trains in a new contract. This clause does not apply in the Ústí district, much to the detriment of passengers, who will have to make do with a less comfortable ride. Railroad romantics with an appreciation for old trains will probably be pleased. The double-decker trains from the 1980s are known in the Czech Republic as "Honecker's last revenge".
German-Czech journalism prizes awarded
This year's German-Czech Journalism Awards were presented in Potsdam. The seven winners received the prizes, which are endowed with 2,000 euros, in the categories text, audio and multimedia, in both languages. There was also a prize dedicated to the journalist Milena Jesenská.
From a record number of 121 entries, the journalists Marek Švehla, Phlipp Krohn (text), Adéla Petrová and Marianne Allweiss (audio), Pavel Šimák and Katrin Molnár with Jana Šustová (multimedia) and Lukáš Houdek (Milena Jesenská Prize) were honored. The contributions dealt with topics such as the memorial to the Porajmos, the Nazi genocide of the Roma, the young generation of the Vietnamese minority in the Czech Republic, Franz Kafka and the border deaths at the Iron Curtain.
The German-Czech Journalism Prize is awarded by the German-Czech Future Fund together with the journalists' associations of both countries, the German Journalists' Association (DJV) and the Journalists' Syndicate of the Czech Republic (Syndikát novinářů ČR).
The production of this newsletter is co-financed by tax funds on the basis of the budget approved by the Saxon State Parliament.