The action is being called through social networks and indicates the intention to hold a meeting on March 1st, at 3:00 pm, at the main entrance of Feira Internacional de Lisboa (FIL), where the start of the Bolsa de Turismo de Lisboa (BTL) event will be taking place.

Speaking to Lusa agency, Carla Reis, owner of local accommodation and the promoter of the protest, explained that the choice of date "was symbolic" and that she intends to draw the Government's attention to the negative consequences of the measures that are being proposed.

At issue is the Mais Habitação program, approved on Thursday by the Council of Ministers, which provides that the issuance of new local accommodation licenses will be “prohibited”, with the exception of rural accommodation in municipalities in the interior of the country, where they will be able to boost the local economy.

In addition, the current local accommodation licenses “will be subject to reassessment in 2030” and, thereafter, periodically, every five years.

Properties that remain in local accommodation will have to pay a special contribution, with the revenue being allocated to the IHRU (Institute for Housing and Urban Rehabilitation) to finance housing policies.


The end of local accommodation?


“These are proposals that predict the end of local accommodation. It's not even local accommodation as we know it. It really is the end of local accommodation. Therefore, the time has come when we stop believing that the State is a good person and we decide to go out for the first time”, justified Carla Reis.

The businesswoman said that local accommodation owners “are very hurt by the Prime Minister”.

“What we want [with the protest] is for them to see who we are, our faces. Contrary to the narrative of people who expel the elderly, of rich people, of people who live sitting down waiting for the income to arrive. We are all the opposite of that,” she pointed out.

In this sense, and acknowledging the existence of a problem with housing, Carla Reis considered that persisting in the “attack on local accommodation” will only serve to “put more families in misery”, which depend directly and indirectly on the sector.

“The problem is not just us. It's all the families that work around the local accommodation. The cleaners, the accountants, the photographers, the plumber,” she pointed out.


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