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A flat tax point of view

Rudi
According to Ruedi Trachsel, Mayor of Lauenen, on 23rd September 2012 when voting regarding the abolition
of flat tax takes place, a lot wil be at stake for Launen. The Saanenland village of Launen is an 800-strong populated village where 12 residents, who are flat taxed, make up 25 percent of the tax revenue contribution to the municipality. It is rare that communities make such information public however it is sometimes necessary. The case illustrates how communities can benefit enormously from the flat. In 2005, two flat taxed packages made up the Lauenen tax file, by 2010 it was twelve. During this time, the tax equity increased from SFr 300,000 to over a million. The net assets per head exploded from 485 to 2,535 Francs and the village made the transition from donor to recipient.  Source Berner Zeitung 28.08.12

What do you think? What do you think? (Comments 2)

Italianità - Gstaad

Bach

The 2012 Menuin Festival Gstaad's programme is unfolding and continues to inspire. The recent Italianità was a evening where Native Saanelander Philippe Bach led the Basel Symphony Orchestra whilst soprano Noëmi Nadelmann enthused the audience.

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1st September 2012, Gstaad Promenade party

Promenade
On Saturday 1 
September an event known as 'Gstaad Promenade Party' will take place for the first time. Boutiques, restaurants, hotels, local craftsmen and folk musicians are all a part of the event. According to the organisors website www.gstaadpromenadeparty.ch - the event is expalined as such: The “Gstaad Promenade Party” is open to all. All actors on the Promenade in Gstaad open their doors for a party where each shop presents a wine or champagne tasting and local specialties from the region. The restaurants and hotels on the Promenade will have a degustation of their specialties, and each of them will present a musical animation (chorus, traditional music, alphorn…). There will also be a presentation of Simmental cows and various other local activities. The “Gstaad Promenade Party” is an event which was founded and managed by the PR agency in Gstaad. It’s a dynamic, popular and festive event that brings a dynamic to the village and unites the whole region! Saturday 1st of September 2012 from 3pm to 8pm.

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Local air tragedy.

Sarina
An Air Sarina flight destined for Saanen crashed early Friday evening 24th August 2012 in the French Jura resulting in all four occupants losing thier lives. The
Pilot and passengers are said to be from the region. The cause of the crash south of Montbeliard is not yet clear.
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New Webcam Videmanette

Gstaad Saanenland Tourism and Bergbahnen Destination Gstaad AG have recently installed a 360 degree panorama webcam at 2,130 m on Videmanette. Live views from the webcam can be found on www.gstaad.ch  in HD quality as well as transmission on Swiss television. It can be found on the weather channel SF DRS and RTS. It is the seventh webcam location in the Destination.
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Club Life

Mandolynaby Mandolyna Theodoracopulos

Are you a clubman? Have you ever been a member or do you intend to apply for membership to a club? Whether or not you are interested in joining a members club, they are an intriguing subject for amateur and professional sociologists. Clubs illustrate a specific place and period’s character. They offer an amusing peek at human posturing. It’s much like a zoo, only for bipeds.

Once upon a time, clubs were exclusively for gentlemen. They were created by and for the English upper classes. Women did not join. Tradesmen were not invited, and clubs were completely exclusive, such as White’s in London, established in 1693. The clubs were primarily political back then, having grown from 18th century coffee houses, though modern clubs have any number of reasons for being.

Groucho Marx was neither English nor upper class, but he understood the concept best. In a telegram to the Friars Club of Beverly Hills he said famously, “Please accept my resignation. I don’t want to belong to any club that will accept people like me as a member.” After all, he worked for a living.

Nowadays there is a club for everybody. There are business clubs, clubs for women, clubs for Gentiles, clubs for Jewish people, clubs for golfers, clubs for skiers, clubs for tennis, beach clubs, nightclubs, and even yachting clubs in landlocked places such as Gstaad. Evidently, people really like clubs, and the socially insecure go out of their way to seek acceptance. They are usually soporific types if you ask me, which you haven’t, but I’ll bet on it anyway. We all know that special breed. They harass you for a signature and demand rather than request consideration. They are no Groucho Marx, and they would probably fit in better at a “gentlemen’s club” of the Playboy variety.

 Fortunately I have only once been in the position to make such requests. For most of my life I have been happily club-free. I never wanted to be a member of any particular club nor had I ever found a club that had many friends with whom I wanted to regularly associate in our own clubhouse. Physical lethargy prevented me from joining any athletic clubs, and perhaps the general lack of youth clubs precluded me from finding a club of my own. Certainly the number of terrific bores who frequent many of the world’s “exclusive” clubs was a disincentive. 

 How times change. I joined three clubs this year. I surprised myself to realize that I actually want to spend time in places where I know a lot of people. Why be a stranger in a strange land? It’s as boring as going to a party where you don’t know anybody. But stranger things have happened. Someone recently told me about a rich man who came to town and invited people he didn’t know to his birthday party. Apparently he was surprised when people declined. That’s the thing about clubs: Proximity doesn’t necessarily ensure association, much like befriending members of the English upper class.

After a lifetime frequenting the Eagle Club here in Gstaad as if it was my own, I am finally a legitimate member. I had to do some light lobbying for support, but in spirit I have always felt like a member, having enjoyed the Eagle since I was small. Both my parents are members, my father being the club’s longest-standing life member and certainly one of the most vocal. You can count on him to reprimand you for sneaking a quick phone call on the terrace or castigating non-skiers who enjoy use of the best tables.

He’s right, but when you have a club as inclusive as the Eagle, you can’t expect everyone to follow the rules. But they should. Club rules are there for good reasons and members must know what they are and keep their guests informed. Don’t be surprised if someone throws your telephone into the snow next time you take a call at the top of the Wasserngrat!

The second club I joined this year is the Andes. The founder members invited me to join, and thus I was spared the embarrassing appeals. For those of you who don’t follow these sorts of things, there is an inter-club ski week every year in St. Moritz. The Corviglia Club hosts the event, which includes such clubs as the Brook from New York and Madrid’s Puerta de Hierro. The Andes has no clubhouse and was only invented recently to include friends of the Corviglia who are not members of any participating clubs. The Eagle Club has been banned for conduct unbecoming, though I intend to remedy this in due course.

Most recently I joined 5 Hertford Street, Robin Birley’s new jewel in London, the mother of clubland. When Richard Caring bought the Birley empire, none of those clubs appealed to me. The gentlemen’s clubs were off-limits, and places such as the Groucho and Soho House never interested me, as I don’t know any of the members. When Hertford Street opened I was thrilled to be invited and even more so to finally have a place to go where I know people, or at least recognize them.

 This is what I love about walking into Hertford Street and the Eagle—all the familiar faces. Did you think I’d join a club to network or make new friends? Bah!

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Hublot Polo Gold Cup Gstaad

Polo
The Hublot Polo Gold Cup Gstaad will take place between 16th and 19th August 2012. This prestigious event held each year brings out the stars of the Polo world to compete on the fields accompanying the airfield of Saanen. The weather is forcast to be beautiful. See www.pologstaad for more details.

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Hospital in Saanen to close in November 2012


Spital2
On the 1st of November 2012, the hospital in Saanen will close its doors. From then on, the hospital in Zweisimmen will operate as an emergency center to guarantee health care in the Simmental-Saanenland region.

The Zweisimmen hospital will upgrade to a new computer tomography scanner, as scans are currently carried out only in Saanen. This investment creates the best possible conditions for the health care in the region and is a commitment from the Spital STS AG to Zweisimmen. According to CEO Bruno Guggisberg, the cost for the new scanner will be SFr 330’000.00. STS AG’s goal is to position Zweisimmen hospital in a way which will improve the business results and minimize deficit, so that the emergency center for the region can be financed and maintained.

The range of medical services in the region of Simmental-Saanenland will not decrease with the closing of Saanen hospital. Internal medicine, surgery, orthopedics, gynecology and obstetrics, 24h-emergency, dialysis and medical cross-functions such as anesthetics, laboratory, operating room and radiology will be available in Zweisimmen.

In case of severe cases such as strokes, heart attacks and accidents in the region, a patient would be stabilized locally, states the press release from STS AG. ‘Primary health care in the region is still conducted via a GP’, says Bruno Guggisberg.  For further examination, therapies and operations,  transport to Thun or Bern will be conducted for local citizens and visitors.

This merge of hospitals will have an impact on 65 employees, for which 50 positions could find a position in Thun, Zweisimmen or at Alterswohnen AG, the institute for elderly residents.  A solution is still being sought for the other 15 employees.

It has still not been decided If the hospital in Zweisimmen will operate after 2014 – even if it is undisputed that the region needs a permanent health care facility. It is a question of money and whether the canton is willing to offer financial support. This will be examined by the Spital STS AG together with the Health and Welfare Administration, and is part of the project “Basic Healthcare Obersimmental-Saanenland”. By the end of August, results regarding building up the emergency service are expected.

What do you think? What do you think? (Comments 4)

Kang Shin-Heae performs at the Gstaad Palace.

Shin
The Amis des Sommets Musicaux de Gstaad met last week for a General Assembly at the Gstaad Palace. T
he young pianist Kang Shin-Heae performed a remarkable concert, whilst business affairs for the organisation took place.

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Oskar Buchs and Marcus S. Bach honoured for lifetime achievement.

Honoured
The three communities Gsteig Lauenen and Saanen honoured 27 individuals for outstanding achievements in the years 2011 and 2012 in the areas of work, culture and sports. 
The Artist Oskar Buchs and Conductor Markus S. Bach were honored for lifetime achievements.

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