Dartout lays out €75m economic recovery plan

The new Minister of State has presented the government’s latest economic recovery plan, which will see €75 million allocated over four different areas.
Minister of State Pierre Dartout presented the government’s Investment Recovery Plan (PRI), developed in consultation with the National Council, during a press conference on Thursday morning.
“This €75 million package, submitted to the vote of the National Council, will allow an ambitious and realistic recovery plan, in a context of vigilance and mobilisation where the Government must strike a balance between health constraints and recovery measures,” said the minister.
The recovery plan will be categorised according to four areas:
The National Green Fund, which will be used to accelerate the Principality’s energy transition.
The Blue Fund, which will assist Monegasque companies in their digital transformation and help create a digital economy in Monaco.
The White Fund, designed to support building and construction activity in the Principality.
And finally, the Red and White Fund, intended to support local commerce and purchasing power in the Principality.
Other social and economic measures include an extension of the Reinforced Total Temporary Unemployment (CTTR) and the partial exemption from employer contributions until October, the extension of teleworking until December and the maintenance of the CARE system until December.
 
Photo: Minister of State Pierre Dartout © Direction de la Communication / Manuel Vitali
 
 
 

Interview: Melissa Roen

Monaco Life talks to multiple award-winning Californian author and screen writer Melissa Roen, who lives by the motto: Hard work beats talent, when talent fails to work hard.
Melissa Roen’s first novel Last Call For Caviar won the 2017 New York Book Festival Honourable Mention and the 2017 Los Angeles Book Festival Honourable Mention, among half a dozen other awards.
During our interview, I discovered that beneath the warm, effusive and bubbly character, lies a seriously deep thinker and hard worker.
Monaco Life:  When did you first start writing and why do you write?
Melissa Roen: I grew up in a home where shelves and tables overflowed with an eclectic assortment of books. My mother was a voracious reader and instilled in me a love for the written word from a young age.
Opening the pages of a book felt like stepping into a world where ideas and possibilities seemed endless.
I learned to read at five-years old, and it felt like a natural progression to want to express myself through writing by the time I was 10.
With the advent of Covid-19, reading Last Call for Caviar is strangely prophetic, especially as the world you describe in it – as well as the sequel Maya Rising – is eerily accurate?
It’s human nature to seek answers, particularly when frightening events occurring in real time mimic fiction. We sit up and take notice, draw parallels. We ask ourselves: Could this really happen? How bad can it get?
In ancient times, our ancestors turned to shamans and prophets for guidance to explain the mysteries of the unknown and to predict what our future held in store for us.
Dystopian literature and film serve a similar purpose, through cautionary tales of what could happen if humanity doesn’t turn way from a certain path.
To do that well, you need to start with a plausible premise – one that resonates, whether it be environmental, existential, or even a contagion sweeping across the globe. Add a dash of imagination and ratchet up the stakes a few notches to create a believable tale.
Today, we’re living in a dystopian film. Flights are grounded; borders are closed. Our world has been altered beyond recognition; uncertainty consumes our thoughts.
This is a pivotal moment in history, but it can also be one of hope – to collectively reimagine a post-Covid world and how we treat each other going forward.
Humanity, and working together, has overcome great and terrible challenges in the past. The choice is ours: doom or hope.

How do you find inspiration to write?
Many imagine that inspiration is a bottomless well that creatives magically tap into at will.
I find that inspiration is an elusive creature. It is exhilarating when it shows up, but it strikes at the most inopportune times and runs off before you even have a chance to properly say hello. You always have to have a pen handy to jot down that idea or lyrical prose; you have to lure inspiration to your side.
You show up every day, put in the hard work, then inspiration flows.
What is your daily routine as a writer?
When I start a new project, it seems like I’m standing at the bottom of an insurmountable mountain. I have no idea how I’m going to get to the top.
I put one foot in front of the other. I know it’s going to be a marathon and I have to pace myself, be disciplined and stick to a routine.
Mornings are spent doing chores and some form of exercise: yoga, dance or swimming. I head back home for a healthy lunch, then I write, or do research, until early evening.
I still read voraciously. It’s impossible to be a writer if you don’t read. I usually fall asleep watching the latest series that I’m following. The next morning, I get up. Wash, rinse and repeat.
What are you presently working on?
I have several projects, including a screen-adaptation of Last Call for Caviar and Maya Rising for an eight-episode dramatic series for streaming platforms.
During the long days of lockdown, I wrote the screen-adaptation of my yet-to-be published new novel Always Choose Love: an epic modern-day love story. The screen version is adapted into a seven-episode romantic thriller. Set against the background of the West African migrant crisis and human trafficking via the Sahara Desert and Libya to Europe, the story takes place in Sicily, Malta and Africa. The novel version of Always Choose Love will be published in 2021.
How has your writing been influenced by your time spent living in the South of France?
Monaco and France’s culture, history, people, language, and locals permeate my stories to the point that they’ve become standalone characters in their own right.
What do you consider your greatest achievement?
At certain moments in my life, I’ve been dealt tough cards, so finding the resiliency to ride out the storm and come out whole the other side.
I feel that you know all the great personalities that have lived in Monaco, which one stands out?
Over the years, I’ve met quite a few. I hosted a birthday party in my home for a friend, which was attended by AS Monaco players of France’s 1998 Champion World Cup Team. I hiked to the Sanctuary of Laghet with a princess. I have done private dance classes with two world-class tennis players – male and female – at Monte Carlo Country Club. Afterwards, they both won the Australian Open, and I like to think putting a little rumba in their step made all the difference.
In 2018, I met Monaco resident Lewis Hamilton backstage at Tommy Hilfiger’s fashion show. What impressed me is his conviction that we can always rise. No matter how many times life or circumstance knocks you down, there’s still tomorrow to achieve your dreams.
All encounters were enriching in their own way. It’s hard to pick just one.
If you had to describe your personality in one word, what would it be?
Curious.
What do you love about Monaco that makes it unique to any other place?
The international flavour of Monaco, where residents from different countries and cultures live in close proximity. Sitting in a café or walking the streets is like taking a trip around the world.
What is your favourite quote or motto that you live by or that comforts you?
“Darkness cannot drive out darkness; only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate; only love can do that.” By Martin Luther King.
 
 

Alpes-Maritimes introduces curfew

Restaurants and bars in the French Riviera will be forced to close by 1am for at least a month as the Prefect of the Alpes-Maritimes attempts to stem an alarming rise in the number of Covid infections.
The measure comes as the south of France was singled out during a Scientific Council press conference on Wednesday. Its president, Jean-François Delfraissy, said that current infection rates in France were “worrying”, however he favoured localised measures as opposed to a general lockdown, particularly in places like the south of France where several clusters have been reported. He urged leaders to react quickly in the coming days to counter the rise in cases throughout the country.
With the threat of a lockdown looming, Prefect of the Alpes-Maritimes Bernard Gonzalez announced that he was placing a 1am curfew on bars and restaurants in municipalities with more than 2,000 inhabitants, and a 11pm curfew on those with less than 2,000 inhabitants.
The order is in place until 15th October 2020 and will be controlled by the police and gendarmerie.
Meanwhile, the Scientific Council said that the country’s 14-day quarantine has not worked and a lack of adhesion to the rules has “weakened our ability to control contamination chains”.
The council therefore suggested reducing quarantine to seven days as people may find it easier to stick to.
Recent analysis shows that most people who test positive for Covid are only contagious for around 10-days – four days prior to symptoms and six days after.
The reduced quarantine time will be discussed during the weekly Defence Council meeting on Friday.
 
 

Circus Festival 2021 cancelled

The Monte-Carlo International Circus Festival will not go ahead as planned in January 2021, the Organising Committee announced this week, citing the current and ongoing health crisis.

The beloved festival, under the Presidency of Princess Stephanie, is the latest high-profile event in Monaco to be taken off the agenda.

The 45th edition will now take place from 20th to 30th January, 2022 and the New Generation Circus, which is in its 10th year, will go forward on 5th and 6th February 2022.

The organisers have expressed their “regret” over the cancellation, but explain that, “Given the current health situation around Covid-19, we had to make this decision, because as you know, the Monte-Carlo International Circus Festival is the largest circus event in the world with a gathering of more than 200 artists coming from 20 different countries and with a very international audience.”

They go on to explain: “We sincerely regret this decision, but in view of the responsibility for the health and safety of all, we are certain of your understanding.”

The circus takes months of preparation and welcomes around 200 artists from 20 different nations, so it is easy to see why the logisitics, under the circumstances, would be difficult.

The circus was started in 1974 by Prince Rainier III and has traditionally attracted top-talent from all over the world. Princess Stephanie first juried the circus at the age of nine and now supervises all aspects of the Big Top event including act selection and production detail.

The circus is split into three categories – art, comedy and animals, following time-honoured circus traditions. The Monte-Carlo Circus Festival has made a point to use the old ways whilst incorporating the new. It has a firm policy on animals and will only engage acts who have a track record of treating their animals well that is beyond reproach.

 
 

What will you be doing on World Clean-Up Day?

World Clean-Up Day is fast approaching and millions of people are preparing to do their part to tidy up the planet. Here’s what’s happening in Monaco and Nice…
World Clean-Up Day is exactly what the label says. It’s a day where millions of people from over 150 countries get together to pick up rubbish from roadsides, beaches, woodlands and wherever else non-organic waste has found its way to.
Last year Monaco took part for the first time, with fantastic results. Even Prince Albert pulled up his sleeves and got involved, taking part in a waste-collecting walk around Port Hercule, much to the delight of participants. Remarkably, closes to half a tonne of waste was collected in a single day.
This year, on 19th September, Monaco will join the world in taking up the task once again.
A number of events have been organised by Decathlon, in partnership with the Mairie de Monaco, that almost make picking up trash sound fun. Take your pick from the following:
Eco rando: 9.30am to 11.30am, 30 people maximum, route in the town of La Turbie
Eco walk team Port: 10am – 12pm, 30 people maximum divided into sub-groups of 10 people. A clean-up walk from Stars’N’Bars to the Town Hall
Eco walk team Monaco-Ville: 10am – 12pm, 30 people maximum divided into sub-groups of 10, departure from the Town Hall and route through the streets of the Rock
Eco run: 10:30am – 12pm, 30 people maximum, a race from Décathlon (Fontvieille district) to the Cap d’Ail coastal path.
At the end of all activities, collected waste will be weighed in the Cour d’Honneur of the Town Hall.
The events are free and open to all. Registrations can be made online at https://activites.decathlon.fr/.
Meanwhile, The Animal Fund (TAF), supported by the Oceanographic Museum of Monaco, is organising a beach clean-up from 9am to 11am in Nice, meeting at the TAF stand at the Neptune Beach, opposite the Negresco Hotel. Gloves and bags will be provided and refreshments will be offered afterwards by Blue Coast Brewing Company.
To register for the Nice clean-up organised by TAF, send an email to: info@theanimalfund.net
 
Photo: 2019 World Clean Up day with Prince Albert, centre © Direction de la Communication / Manuel Vitali
 
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Prince Albert joins World Clean Up Day efforts
 
 
 
 
 

Grimaldi Forum offering hybrid events

In reaction to the current times we are living in, the Grimaldi Forum is now offering a range of services for events that combine face-to-face and virtual participation.

With the health situation as it stands, the scheduling of many live events hang precariously in the balance all over the globe. Monaco alone has seen the cancellation or postponement of many of its key yearly conferences and exhibitions. The Grimaldi Forum, which has hosted many of these events, has taken a different stance to accommodate these new times and is now putting on hybrid events which will be a combination of the virtual and the live. 

They, along with partner Key4Events, are offering their clients what they call “turnkey solutions”. These include allowing participants who can’t be physically present to attend live or rebroadcasted events on one or more other sites, with the possibility of live interaction, as well as inviting speakers who are unable to be present to speak remotely, either live or in a pre-recorded version.

The Forum is also offering a “recording, branding and dissemination offer” whereby they “store content and download solutions as well as statistical studies for measuring the impact of these hybrid events.”

For Sylvie Biancheri, Managing Director of the Grimaldi Forum Monaco, “Distancing cannot replace face-to-face contact – human contact is the very essence of our activities – but the concept of a hybrid or “phygital” event makes it possible to overcome a temporary impossibility of taking part in an event, as may currently be the case due to the Covid-19 healthcare crisis. By streaming the event to one or more hubs located remotely where other participants are gathered together, this concept can also increase the audience of an event that has reached its maximum face-to-face capacity, and in this regard, it constitutes an interesting lever of development”.