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View Full Version : Snacking tourists fined after Rome declares 'War on the Sandwich'


TheMatrix
October 6th, 2012, 01:38 PM
Source (http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/10/05/14235787-snacking-tourists-fined-after-rome-declares-war-on-the-sandwich?lite)

ROME -- It’s one of the highlights of any trip to Rome: Sitting on the Spanish Steps eating a real Italian gelato. But on Oct. 1, it became a potentially costly vacation memory.

The mayor of the "eternal city" has made it illegal to eat snacks and junk food on or around its monuments.

Tourists will still be allowed to eat while they walk, but stop with a bag of chips in your hands or sit down while chewing on your panino, and you are eligible for a fine of 25 to 500 euros ($32 to $650). An Italian daily newspaper dubbed it the “War on the Sandwich.”

Dressed in their white and blue uniforms, local police officers Alessio Valentini and Magdi Adib were on patrol Thursday looking for anyone daring to flout the new law.

They shoved away a group of young Dutch tourists who sat next to the Colosseum to enjoy their pizzas. “Go, go,” Adib told the bemused boys, who didn’t know which crime they had committed.

'Out of control'
The officers told NBC News they had fined seven tourists -- all foreigners -- since the morning. The standard penalty was 50 euros ($65).

“We could have given tickets to many more, but you have to apply some reason,” Adib said. “If they drink a bottle of water it’s OK, but if they camp out, we fine them.”

“Eating on monuments can really get out of control,” he added. “Once I caught a group of tourists who set a table on the Spanish Steps, with table cloth and cutlery! This has to stop.”

Tourists enjoy ice cream in central Rome on July 30, before the new decree came into force.

Valentini agreed with his partner. “I once caught a tourist chopping a watermelon in the fountain at Piazza Navona,” he told NBC News. “Now we have a way to stop them.”

A young German tourist, who was sitting nearby and eating a sandwich, couldn’t believe it at first when told about the decree.

“What? It’s full of food carts around here … where am I supposed to eat?” he said.

Tourists sitting on the Spanish Steps shared his bewilderment.

Both a Chinese tourist eating ice cream from a cup and a Romanian digging from a bag of chips while admiring the sunset over Via Condotti pointed out that there were no signs explaining the new law and asked how were they supposed to know about the rule.

When asked about this complaint, three local policemen patrolling the area told NBC News that there was no need for a sign.

“It’s common sense,” one officer said. “You can’t dirty such a beautiful and historical monument with ice cream and bread crumbs just because you can sit on it.”

They too had handed out many fines, but worried that in the end the penalty would not be paid.

“Most of them are foreigners, so I doubt they will pay the ticket before they go back to their countries," the officer said. "It’s more likely they’ll keep it as a souvenir."

Well! So much for a nice vacation.
And for those few strange incidents(chopping watermelons on a fountain -- who does that?), you can give fines. But for eating gelato or bread? Come on!

Noirtier
October 6th, 2012, 03:25 PM
Wait... What? So, now people aren't allowed to eat while they enjoy the sights on a vacation to Rome? Talk about ridiculous laws, my word...

ManyPearTree
October 6th, 2012, 04:19 PM
I am curious as to what would happen if I went there in a wheelchair and started eating.

FreeFall
October 6th, 2012, 04:48 PM
Honestly they could go about it better but I see nothing wrong with them not want idiot tourists getting grimy, food all over their monuments. I'm not exactly allowed to climb onto the Lincoln memorial and chow down on a sloppy joe.

They need to set up designated eating spots and signs for the tourists though, I feel like they're setting them up for fines.

Noirtier
October 6th, 2012, 06:01 PM
They need to set up designated eating spots and signs for the tourists though, I feel like they're setting them up for fines.

This is more what I was thinking earlier. I had assumed they more or less already had spots set up, but apparently I was wrong :P When you said that it seems like they're setting people up for fines, it's very true. That's exactly what it feels like, almost like its some sort of new way for them to raise money--in a somewhat dishonest way. Especially having no signs around to inform people that they are prohibited from eating on these sites.

Mortal Coil
October 6th, 2012, 08:07 PM
Honestly they could go about it better but I see nothing wrong with them not want idiot tourists getting grimy, food all over their monuments. I'm not exactly allowed to climb onto the Lincoln memorial and chow down on a sloppy joe.

They need to set up designated eating spots and signs for the tourists though, I feel like they're setting them up for fines.

I agree with basically everything in this. The monuments are important and in the interests of attracting more tourists and just preserving these works of art, it's completely understandable that they would want to avoid food spillage as much as possible.
Also, it very well may be a ploy to raise money. But what are they going to do, arrest tourists for having chips while standing still?

TigerBoy
October 7th, 2012, 04:40 AM
Also, it very well may be a ploy to raise money.

If it wasn't a money raising ploy, they'd put up signs. (Signs cost money and reduce your income, not putting up signs generates more income.)

+1 for FreeFall's comments of course.

This will only annoy the hell out of tourists and whatever prompted this, the lack of organisation and planning only perpetuates negative Italian stereotypes.

wild1
October 7th, 2012, 11:18 AM
There's just too many rules and laws over the smallest things. Let people be!!!

HunterSteele
October 8th, 2012, 12:47 PM
If they're trying to keep the area clean, how come it's OK to walk and eat but not to stop or sit?

Jolty
October 8th, 2012, 12:59 PM
It's true, it's ok, eat something inside a church or a castle is bad education, but outdoor...
Turism is one of the low things good we have in Italy

ArsenicCatNip
October 8th, 2012, 10:30 PM
I think it's quite hypocritical to get on the tourists for eating near it and not on the vendors for selling food near monuments. Also Eating and walking is ok, not sitting and eating? I dunno about you but people are more likely to litter while walking because they don't like to hold on to trash.. If anything they should put up signs, and trash bins.