Metropolitan cities of Italy

The 14 metropolitan cities of Italy (Italian: città metropolitane d'Italia) are administrative divisions of Italy, operative since 2015, which are a special type of province. The metropolitan city, as defined by law, includes a large core city and the surrounding suburbs and countryside closely related to it by economic activities and essential public services, as well as to cultural relations and to territorial features.

Metropolitan cities of Italy before the 2016 Sardinian provincial reform

History

The original 1990 law defined as metropolitan cities the comuni of Turin, Milan, Venice, Genoa, Bologna, Florence, Rome, Bari, Naples and their respective hinterlands, reserving the autonomous regions the right to individuate metropolitan areas in their territory.[1] In 2009, amendments added Reggio Calabria to the list.[2] The metropolitan areas defined by the autonomous regions were: Cagliari and Sassari in Sardinia; Catania, Messina and Palermo in Sicily.

On 3 April 2014 the Italian Parliament approved a law that established ten metropolitan cities in Italy,[3] excluding the autonomous regions. Five more were added later. The new metropolitan cities (except Sassari, which ceased to exist in 2016 after being merged with the province of Olbia-Tempio to form the province of Sassari) have been operative since 1 January 2015.

Government

Palazzo Valentini is the seat of the Council of the Metropolitan City of Rome Capital

A metropolitan city is composed of a central city, which serves as the seat of government, and its surrounding municipalities (comuni). Each metropolitan city is headed by a metropolitan mayor (sindaco metropolitano), who is assisted by a legislative body, the metropolitan council (consiglio metropolitano), and by a non-legislative assembly, the metropolitan conference (conferenza metropolitana).[4]

The metropolitan mayor is the chief executive and administrative officer of the city. The mayor represents, convenes and chairs meetings of the metropolitan council, administers city offices, supervises the functioning of city services, and prepares the city's budget.[4] The mayor of the provincial capital comune automatically becomes the metropolitan mayor.[4]

The metropolitan council is the chief legislative body of the metropolitan city. It proposes laws and amendments to the metropolitan conference, and approves programs, regulations and rules submitted to it by the metropolitan mayor such as the budget.[4] The council consists of mayors and city councillors of each commune in the metropolitan city elected from amongst themselves using partially open list proportional representation, with seats allocated using the D'Hondt method.[4] Metropolitan councillors are elected at-large for five-year terms; votes for metropolitan councillors are weighted by grouping comunes of a certain population range into nine groups so that votes of the mayors and city councillors of the more populous groups are worth than those of less populous groups.[4] The number of councillors a metropolitan city is granted depends upon its population: metropolitan cities with a population of 3 million or more have 24 councillors; metropolitan cities with a population of 800,000 but less than or equal to 3 million have 18 councillors; all other metropolitan cities have 14 councillors.[4]

The metropolitan conference adopts or rejects laws and amendments approved by the metropolitan council. It is the ultimate approving body of the city's budget.[4] Actions in the conference require votes of at least two-thirds of comunes in the metropolitan city and the majority of overall resident population. The conference is composed of all mayors of the communes within the metropolitan city.[4][5]

Functions

Metropolitan cities carry out the basic functions of a province, principally:[4]

  • Local planning and zoning
  • Provision of local police services
  • Transport and city services coordination

Metropolitan cities

Metropolitan cityArea (km²)Population
(May 2020)
Population
density (/km2)
Operative sinceMayor
Rome (Roma)5,352 km2 (2,066 sq mi)4,323,6648111 January 2015Roberto Gualtieri (PD)
Milan (Milano)1,575 km2 (608 sq mi)3,274,4992,0641 January 2015Giuseppe Sala (Ind)
Naples (Napoli)1,171 km2 (452 sq mi)3,076,6752,6341 January 2015Gaetano Manfredi (Ind)
Turin (Torino)6,827 km2 (2,636 sq mi)2,246,4233291 January 2015Stefano Lo Russo (PD)
Palermo5,009 km2 (1,934 sq mi)1,245,8262504 August 2015Roberto Lagalla (UDC)
Bari3,821 km2 (1,475 sq mi)1,222,1713281 January 2015Antonio Decaro (PD)
Catania3,574 km2 (1,380 sq mi)1,101,4633104 August 2015Salvo Pogliese (FdI)
Bologna3,702 km2 (1,429 sq mi)1,017,2252741 January 2015Matteo Lepore (PD)
Florence (Firenze)3,514 km2 (1,357 sq mi)1,000,1112881 January 2015Dario Nardella (PD)
Venice (Venezia)2,462 km2 (951 sq mi)849,1733471 January 2015Luigi Brugnaro (Ind)
Genoa (Genova)1,839 km2 (710 sq mi)831,7864571 January 2015Marco Bucci (Ind)
Messina3,266 km2 (1,261 sq mi)618,4591924 August 2015Federico Basile (Ind)
Reggio Calabria3,183 km2 (1,229 sq mi)539,07917231 January 2016Giuseppe Falcomatà (PD)
Cagliari1,248 km2 (482 sq mi)429,6673451 January 2017Paolo Truzzu (FdI)

See also

References

External links