Tension is rising between the Milan council and the San Donato council, according to a report, and this is making things more difficult for AC Milan and the stadium project. And whether a solution can be reached or not is currently unknown.
Milan have been working on the San Donato project for quite some time, not wasting any time as all parties await potential San Siro updates, and the total cost will be €1.28bn. However, there are still some hurdles to overcome as highlighted this morning.
According to Corriere dello Sport, as cited by MilanNews, the relations between the Milan council and the San Donato council continue to be far from ideal. In fact, tension seems to be rising as the San Donato council would like to borrow law enforcement officers from Milan on gameday.
This is a request that the Milan council, and Mayor Beppe Sala, don’t want to satisfy as things stand and there are also infrastructure dilemmas. Collaboration is needed, in short, otherwise this project will be far too difficult for all parties involved.
Depending on the outcome of the upcoming San Siro meetings, it remains to be seen if the Milan council will change its tune and give in to the requests of San Donato.
Mafia politics at it again…
Berlusconi couldn’t make a new stadium when he was the prime mister.
The corruption and the birocracy are just destroying the italian football
Well it seems ACM must waiting until Sala not mayor anymore . That dude will do everything to block new stadium project
Its things like this that shows Italy will never become a dominant footballing nation because its things like this that show me they don’t value football as everything. Not like the Brazilians, French, British etc these nations love there football but Italians do also but they don’t value it as much as those other nations
I dnt know what is wrong in italy? why are they priotising monuments instead of development and financial will power for their clubs to enable them compete with other top clubs in the world – for crying out loud, what is their problem? This is 21st century!