Marco Nicolini in the Cassa di Risparmio
The news of the day is the recruitment of Marco Nicolini, network councilor, in the state bank, Cassa di Risparmio, of which prof. Gianfranco Vento, appointed by Rete himself and whose Board of Directors is for 4 out of 5 directors expressed by the majority. We are among those who think that a councilor, like any other resident in this Republic, when he is unemployed has every right to look for a job, participating in all the competitions or selections he deems, obviously including those banned. by Cassa di Risparmio (which seems to have started, some time ago, the search for 4 professional figures by opening a public “selection”). Of course, with reversed parts, the Network has shouted at the conspiracy, at the most vulgar clientelism, having made interpellations and inundated the newspapers with suspicions, poisons and allegations, and certainly have talked about piloted hiring of majority politicians. But we are proudly different from the Net and instead of spreading inferences we prefer to think that Nicolini was chosen for his skills and experience, not for his political affiliation. And we wish him the best of luck in his work. The real problem is another. And that is, once again, the management of the Cassa di Risparmio and its logic. Cassa di Risparmio, a few months ago, sent home all former Asset Banca employees who had previously been hired on a fixed-term basis. In truth, some (few) were then summarized over time, including one who is by chance the son of a Christian Democratic advisor and who in the past had also had a legal dispute with Carisp (but it is evidently passed over when you return to power). And if one event says nothing, two events make a clue … A few months ago we needed to reduce costs and most of the former Asset employees were left at home. Then it was still necessary to reduce costs, and then Carisp made a series of early retirements (often with significant “incentives” for leaving) in order to reduce staff. Today, however, 4 hires are made. One of which even for a certainly not essential figure, that is a counter operator, the so-called “cashier”. What has changed? Is this how the tens, or rather hundreds of millions of euros that the Government threw into the Cassa di Risparmio in the last year, between repayment of past loans and irredeemable title, are used? To recruit people who are certainly not essential to the bank? Where is a management plan for Carisp, which is not based only on the continuous forage of the State and which aims at containing costs? Here lies the biggest scandal of this affair: the management of Carisp, oriented to the sperm of the money that the Government provides (by putting the San Marino citizens in debt). And we want to forcefully denounce it once again.
Cs Repubblica Futuro