No budget means no headway on replacing bomb shelter windows in Gaza envelope

AuthorANNA AHRONHEIM
Published date30 September 2021
Publication titleJerusalem Post, The: Web Edition Articles (Israel)
The IDF announced in June that following a recommendation by Home Front Command, the windows in the bomb shelters in communities within seven kilometers of Gaza would be replaced with thicker windows due to the projected increased lethality of rockets fired from there.

Though many bomb-shelter windows are only 16 mm. thick, as regulations do not demand more, standard bomb-shelter windows are 24 mm. thick. New regulations require the windows to be 32 mm. thick.

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Despite new regulations and plans by Home Front Command to fix the windows, there has been no headway on changing them due to a lack of government decision or budget.

Following months of work by Home Front Command, there are now 17,000 mamad safe rooms, or bomb shelters, within seven km. of the Gaza Strip, and of those, an estimated 8,000 windows will need to be replaced at a cost of NIS 60 million.

Should all the 17,000 be replaced, that would cost an estimated NIS 119m.

The military, which continually meets with regional authorities, has felt the pressure for the project to start and understands the urgency. It has said the work can begin immediately once it receives the green light.

An updated intelligence report found that Gaza terrorist groups are in possession of rockets with new capabilities that are relevant within a range of seven kilometers.

It was the first time that such a decision was made retroactively, and it was done "to ensure the safety of the citizens of Israel in accordance with the threats posed," the IDF said.

Shortly after the fighting in May, the Home Front Command, which is responsible for the construction of bomb shelters and their windows, began work on the new regulations for window size. The new regulations came into effect recently, and all new private bomb shelters built since the May war will receive windows that are 32 mm. thick.

Civilian companies that make the windows have been given the new regulations, and have met with officers from Home Front Command so that they can replace the windows properly should they be approached by individuals who chose to fund the work on their own.

It is estimated that one window would cost between NIS 5,000 and NIS 7,000.

The recommendation was made...

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