Recently appointed head of Italy’s department of cultural heritage, Dario Franceschini, announced a suite of reforms to his organization and its subsidiaries across the country, on Monday, L’Espresso reports. The reforms were spurred by the need to eliminate at least 37 top-level positions within the department in order to comply with new budgetary law intended to help place the cash-strapped government back on track. In keeping with a new breed of Italian government that has been noted since the country’s youngest-ever Prime Minister, Mateo Renzi, took office in February, Franceschini’s plan breaks from tradition. Rather than consulting industry experts, he has sought in most cases to look for ways in which Italy’s wealth of cultural heritage can be used to generate increased capital for the country while minimizing costs. Principally, this includes a more direct link between his office of cultural heritage and tourism. He told the paper that the single worst enemy his plan wishes to combat is the, “absolute lack of integration,” between the ministry’s two major goals: cultural preservation and tourism generation… READ MORE
23 July 2014