Employment, colleges open until 6 p.m., ecological transition… Élisabeth Borne’s priorities for the neighborhoods

by time news

2023-10-27 13:02:34

Six years after Grigny’s call, the beginning of a response in Chanteloup-les-Vignes. Prime Minister Élisabeth Borne visited this popular Yvelines town this Friday morning as part of the Interministerial Council of Cities (CIV). An approach aimed at the 5 million inhabitants of working-class neighborhoods for whom a battery of government measures has been detailed.

Among them, “the deployment from 2024 of a testing policy to fight against discriminatory practices in access to internships, hiring, housing or bank loans”, indicates Matignon. A barometer of discrimination must also be created in order to measure it in the professional world, in services and in access to goods.

A fund of 300 million euros over three years will also be allocated to associations with a view to “remobilizing people furthest from employment”. Half of the envelope will actually be dedicated to residents of priority neighborhoods. The objective is in line with President Macron’s desire to achieve full employment. The number of state partner companies in this process must reach 5,000, compared to 3,000 currently.

A section dedicated to the ecological transition of neighborhoods

Ecology also occupies an important part of this CIV. Twenty-four new cities and communities have been selected in the Resilient Neighborhoods program, for the ecological transition of neighborhoods through urban renewal. Amiens (Somme), Mulhouse (Haut-Rhin), Angers (Maine-et-Loire), Grenoble and Échirolles (Isère) or even Béziers (Hérault) and Miramas (Bouches-du-Rhône) will benefit from it on the national territory.

In Île-de-France, Colombes (Hauts-de-Seine), Valenton (Val-de-Marne), Savigny-sur-Orge (Essonne), Montereau (Seine-et-Marne) are also included in the list. Seine-Saint-Denis is also well served with Sevran, Clichy-sous-Bois, Montfermeil and the nine municipalities of the Est Ensemble territorial public establishment. In total, the system now includes around fifty “resilient neighborhoods”.

The CIV also includes the fact that the share of the green fund invested in neighborhoods will be doubled, with a target of 15% green spaces, as well as natural spaces accessible to the population being created. The ecological component also focuses on the development of public transport and soft mobility, starting with cycling, with a “prioritization of the service of QPV (priority districts of the City Policy) in the fund’s calls for projects Active mobility.

Colleges open from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m.

As access to public services is often criticized in neighborhoods, a series of measures is devoted to this aspect. Welcoming young children, educational success… Matignon also endorses this proposal from Emmanuel Macron to open colleges from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. in priority education districts. A shocking idea, launched last June, and which will be widespread in 2024 in the REP and REP+.

Priority education networks in which the government wants to “complete the splitting of major section classes”. And in the QPV specifically, he wants to “strengthen the reception of children from 2 years old.

To improve access to care, Matignon wants to “increase the number of outpatient internships in QPVs”, from the 4th year of professionalization in general medicine.

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