Federal government abandons binding provisions for cantons to create new transit sites for travelling communities, citing funding constraints and regional autonomy.

"It is not, therefore, the project to build transit areas that has been abandoned, but the binding method for the cantons to achieve this."
The Swiss federal government has officially scrapped its power to force cantons into compliance regarding Traveller transit sites. In a decisive move that reshapes the landscape of national infrastructure policy, Bern has abandoned the binding provisions that would have obliged regions to construct new facilities for the travelling community. This is not merely a pause; it is a fundamental shift in governance strategy.
The Federal Office of Culture (FOC) confirmed the retreat, stating that the "binding method" is dead, even if the theoretical goal of creating space remains. This decision effectively dismantles the centralized enforcement mechanism that was designed to ensure equitable distribution of transit sites across the country. Instead of a federal mandate, the future of these sites now rests entirely on a fragile system of voluntary coordination. The government asserts it will continue to handle measures within its specific remit, but the heavy liftingâand the decision-making powerâhas been firmly handed back to the regions.
Money talks, and in this case, the lack of it has silenced federal authority. The collapse of the national coordination project stems directly from a critical financial standoff. The cantons, fiercely protective of their budgets, voted against the project largely because the federal government refused to open its checkbook. Bern admitted it was "not in a position" to financially commit to the development costs of these areas, creating an insurmountable impasse.
This funding gap exposed a fatal flaw in the proposal: a federal demand without federal dollars. By refusing to subsidize the infrastructure they were mandating, the government effectively handed the cantons a vetoâwhich they have now exercised. The implications are stark. Without federal financial incentives, the likelihood of cash-strapped regions prioritizing controversial transit sites is expected to plummet. The burden of cost now aligns perfectly with the burden of planning, a dynamic that historically leads to stagnation in infrastructure development.
Regional autonomy has won a significant victory over centralized planning. The responsibility for determining the number of transit spaces, their geographic distribution, and their development standards now falls squarely on the shoulders of the cantons. This shift marks a return to a decentralized approach, where local authorities will coordinate amongst themselves and the FOC, rather than bowing to a dictate from Bern.
While this empowers local governments, it raises critical questions about consistency. The FOC insists that "it is not the project to build transit areas that has been abandoned," but without a binding framework, the risk of a patchwork solution is high. Critics fear that this autonomy will lead to a "not in my backyard" mentality, where cantons shuffle responsibility to their neighbors. The coordination is now voluntary, meaning the pressure to act is political rather than legal. The cantons demanded control; now they must prove they can manage a complex national issue without federal coercion.
The consequences of this policy vacuum are already playing out on the tarmac. Just weeks ago, on April 15, 2025, the urgency of the situation was laid bare when police blocked a massive convoy of 50 caravans attempting to enter Canton Valais. The standoff, which occurred without prior warning, highlights the volatile reality of a system grappling with insufficient infrastructure.
These incidents are not administrative footnotes; they are flashpoints of conflict. When transit sites are unavailable or coordination fails, the result is immediate friction between authorities and the travelling community. With the federal government stepping back, such confrontations may become more frequent as Travellers navigate a fragmented landscape of local regulations. The blockage in Valais serves as a stark warning: while the paperwork in Bern has changed, the demand for space on the road remains constant, and the potential for deadlock is higher than ever.