(ANSA) – CAGLIARI, 10 NOV – English stronger than law. But the competition is for bailiff in the courts. And many of those not admitted to the oral test, in particular those who had answered the questions on the codes very well, but had slipped (not too much because in any case above the sufficiency) on the language of Shakespeare, now turn to the Tar.
“We have studied laws and paragraphs. And for some oversight in English, are we out?” This is what a Sardinian candidate wrote in a letter to the Minister of Justice Marta Cartabia. “I achieved a score much higher than the minimum but I was not admitted to the oral test, while many candidates with a score lower than mine, therefore presumably less prepared on the legal part, can continue with the oral test”. There are also many appeals from Sardinia. Only the lawyer Francesco Leone collected seventeen. Many others have come from the rest of Italy.
The rules of the competition that had brought hundreds of candidates to Cagliari last October 13, with the hope of getting the green light for one of the 2,329 units in the roles of the Ministry of Justice, are under accusation.
The rules were clear. Forty question of law. But there were barrier thresholds in computer science and in English with a minimum score of 3.5 out of 5. It is useless to know the administrative, civil procedure, criminal procedure and penitentiary system at heart if you are unable to reach the score established by the rules of the competition for Saxon computer and genitive questions. There are those who took almost 27 (the minimum score was 21) but did not obtain the oral pass for that Anglo-IT obstacle.
Then he turned to the TAR. “In terms of public competitions, certain rules are needed – explains the lawyer Leone – It is unthinkable that each competition involves different methods of completion.
This, for example, provides for a triple barrier threshold which is unique: it is neither envisaged by the framework law on public competitions nor by the Brunetta reform “. (ANSA).
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Source From: Ansa
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