Plouisy is a small town of 2,000 inhabitants located near Guingamp, in the Côtes d'Armor. For two years, she has been fighting to see her pharmacy reopen. In the absence of a buyer, the dispensary had closed and the license had been lost. Very mobilized, the municipality fought for its pharmacy to reopen its doors, going so far as to publish an ad on its Facebook page. In its fight to maintain businesses in rural areas, the town did not perhaps expect to face opposition from the order of pharmacists. However, it is the council of the Breton order which seized justice to try to cancel the reopening before the administrative court of Rennes.

According to

Ouest-France

, the court has just dismissed the council of the Order of Brittany.

The latter, responsible for the regulation of the profession, estimated that the opening of a pharmacy in Plouisy could "call into question the balance of the dispensary network on the territory of Guingamp".

An argument that did not convince the administrative court, which validated the reopening of the dispensary.

A license transfer, a first in France

To keep trade open, the town bought the building, and even financed part of the work, to the chagrin of the municipal opposition.

But above all she had to negotiate the transfer of a pharmacy license from another region, with the agreement of the two regional health agencies.

It would be a first in France, according to the mayor.

According to

Ouest-France

, it was the cessation of activity of a pharmacy in Evreux, in Normandy, which allowed the reopening of the pharmacy in Plouisy, scheduled for March.

Justice

Saint-Brieuc: A motorist sentenced for having beaten a woman for a parking space

Politics

Brittany: Sanctions demanded against Christian Troadec after an "orgy" evening in Carhaix

  • Justice

  • Court

  • Rurality

  • Saint Brieuc

  • Society

  • Pharmacy

  • Trade

  • 0 comment

  • 0 share

    • Share on Messenger

    • Share on Facebook

    • Share on twitter

    • Share on Flipboard

    • Share on Pinterest

    • Share on Linkedin

    • Send by Mail

  • To safeguard

  • A fault ?

  • To print