The hostel that sheltered Crimean Deputy Prime Minister Burlakov will be donated to Simferopol
Simferopol, February 17 (Navigator, Astra Yazyka) - The leadership of Crimea has decided to transfer the scandalous dormitory PMK-6, associated with the name of First Deputy Prime Minister Pavel Burlakov, to the municipal ownership of Simferopol. The deputies ignored the claims of the village council to the property of the Crimean mobile mechanized column No. 6.
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The draft resolution included in the agenda of the February session of the Supreme Council of Crimea proposes to transfer the dormitory on the street from republican property to the territorial community of Simferopol. Green, 7 in the village. Komsomolskoe.
As First Deputy Minister of Housing and Communal Services of the autonomy Anatoly Pavlov explained at a meeting of the budget commission of the parliament, the hostel was practically left ownerless - PMK 6 is in a state of bankruptcy and there is no one to ensure the residents’ right to privatize square meters.
“The main condition is that the hostel must be in communal ownership. In this way, we will relieve the social tension that exists,” Pavlov assured.
He added that the housing stock should be maintained by local municipalities, for which funds are provided in the budget.
“In Simferopol, a special enterprise operates for the maintenance of dormitories - this is the Bytfon housing complex,” noted Pavlov.
During the discussion of the project, the head of the budget commission, Valery Palchuk, said that the Supreme Council of Crimea had received an appeal from the Gresovsky village council with a request to transfer the PMK-6 dormitory to their balance sheet.
“There is a decision of the session of the Simferopol City Council to transfer it to Bytfon, but since the village council believes that it would be more effective to transfer it to their balance sheet,” Palchuk explained. “We will do additional work to ensure that the city council makes an appropriate decision.”
It should be noted that the PMK-6 dormitory attracted public attention after it became known during the parliamentary elections of Ukraine in the fall of 2012 that the first deputy prime minister of the autonomy government, Pavel Burlakov, who had never worked in PMK-6, was registered in this dormitory. After publications in the media, Burlakov contacted the police with a statement about the disclosure of confidential information, in connection with which criminal proceedings were opened. The publication that published Burlakov’s registration data was sentenced to a 3 thousand UAH fine, although the deputy prime minister’s lawyer confirmed the authenticity of the data specified in the publication.
It is interesting that after Burlakov’s registration, centralized water supply and sewerage began to be installed in the dormitory building. There were more registered residents in the hostel, and those renting a room under a rental agreement began to be forcibly evicted.
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