Observations
This is a subtitle for your new post
The work in Moldova is always just a bubble off and slightly short. With political fanfare, the main streets of Causeni got repaved but the next rain filled up the dips in the road where the puddles had been before as there was no attempt to regrade the surface. When it rains in Causeni it is of monsoon proportions, so these puddles last several days or until the next rain as there is no effort to improve the drainage to a storm sewer (but I'm not sure I've ever seen one). The buildings in Moldova are made with concrete foundations and superstructure with an infill of stone. I was watching a small store front addition. The concrete was poured into the forms one pail at a time from a small mixer on the ground and if the day ended, they continued pailing it in the next day even though the previous concrete had set. When they strip the forms, there doesn’t seem to be much adhesion between each day’s pour, and there is exposed rebar because they do not vibrate or somehow get out the air bubbles. There is also a nasty habit of starting a job, tearing everything up and then leaving for an indeterminate period.
The banking system is interesting. This is a cash society. The banks and citizens have literally never seen nor heard of a check. We I showed them a check book, they passed it around. If you send money into the country from your job in say Italy, you make sure it is less than 100,000 MDL (Moldovan lei) or you need to explain to the bank and the Moldovan Central Bank where it came from. The government is truly afraid of money laundering but I think the bank is just nosey. Support from abroad seems to be a satisfactory answer. So, if you get money from abroad, you keep it in Euros or USD, in your account. Then if you buy a major purchase, say a house, you go to the bank for E40,000, in a big bag, for the closing. Then the seller needs an affidavit that the money is from a house sale. Then everyone returns to the bank to convert it into lei. You gotta love the bureaucracy. If it is a more official transaction, like dispersing money for a government registered NGO, then it has to be in MDL (Moldovan lei) and their highest denomination is 500 lei. That could be a serious suitcase of banknotes!
I tried to open a company account. Got the business charter translated to Romanian, got apostilles of everything the Secretary of State of Washington State had and translated that into Romanian. But now they want an apostille of an apostille of the Corporate Charter setting up the company. Hmm. I am not sure it is worth another $500. I will deal with this through company minutes.
Let’s build a school. There are enough programs in the school and only 24 hours in a day, so they need more space as there is something going on 7 days a week. A joint venture of a building and a language school renter seems like a logical idea. There is white money and black money in Moldova and this will be built white with all the necessary permits and no bribery or ‘gifts for friends’. This will be built to American standards with disabled access, 3 classrooms (will require another teacher) and a computer lab. After some peculiar negotiations, the land was purchased.
ReCent Posts






