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These are the 3 projects chosen by the neighbors that will be launched in Dénia

26 December 2023 - 10: 00

The voting phase of the 7th edition of participatory budgets ended on December 20 with the participation of 839 people. 16 citizen initiatives were put up for voting, of which the Dénia City Council will execute the three that have obtained the greatest number of votes, after the technical services have assessed their viability.

The proposals that will materialize with the 300.000 euros that the City Council allocates to the projects voted on by citizens within the 2023 participatory budgets are:

  • Tree plantations in different streets of Dénia with the main objective of increasing shade and improving climatic well-being (464 votes)
  • Expansion of the sidewalk, planting of trees and access for pedestrians and cycles in the surroundings of the Montgó school, to improve mobility, safety and climatic comfort (428 votes)
  • Intelligent lighting at pedestrian crossings that detects people by activating warning lights for vehicles (403 votes)

The other 100.000 euros that make up the total item of the 2023 participatory budgets will be allocated to two actions decided by the Mayor's councils, the Neighborhood Participation Council and the Local Council for Children and Adolescents (CLIA).

On the one hand, the adaptation of sidewalks for older people on roads that are agreed upon with the Elderly Council and, secondly, the installation of play elements next to the Bosc de Diana zip lines, whose typology will be agreed with the CLIA.

For the Councilor for Citizen Participation, Pepe Doménech, it is important to highlight the involvement of older people and children and adolescents in this participatory initiative. Doménech recalled that the actions selected by the Councils of the Elderly, of Citizen Participation and the CLIA "come from the more than 250 proposals collected among the elderly (Senior Classes and Retirement Home) and from the workshops carried out with the students of 5th grade »

Comments
  1. PERE QUART says:

    Nobody cares about the beaches that this Frankenstein town hall has abandoned and they are the ones that feed Denia.
    The talk that rotten posidonia protects the beach smacks of justification for having them abandoned.
    It's a shame to see them.
    MAYOR RESIGNATION.

  2. George says:

    Surely all of this is necessary, but I see it as more necessary to fix the streets, re-pave (even pave in many cases), put in sidewalks, put in public lighting..., in the Las Marinas area. Although it seems like there are only vacationers there, many of us live there. And both of us pay our taxes. You will have to move downtown to be a first-class citizen.

  3. Fortuna says:

    Agree with everything. These politicians don't think. But all these opinions must be presented to the city council itself and even then "psssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssss. But at least give the can

  4. Fernando says:

    These are the crumbs of 300 million euros on an annual budget of many millions, which the Franquestein council deigns to decide for citizens who, in their immense ignorance, cannot decide how much is dedicated to their priorities. For that, disinterested politicians already decide for the masses... very participatory.

  5. Teresa says:

    When will there be bike lanes, well marked, that do not coincide with cars, that link all the peripheral areas with the center?

  6. Roberto Caballero Muñoz says:

    And a bigger one: in what century will they “try” to reform the road from the Fernando restaurant to Nova Denia with sidewalks to be able to walk to the center without fear of being run over?, in addition to the cleanliness of this one that is conspicuous by its absence despite to pay more garbage tax than any city with these same inhabitants. We leave the beach thing for the next reincarnation.

    • Connor MacLeod says:

      If they are going to expropriate the things in the marinas from now on, it lacks any logic since the marinas towards the sea will be all beach sand without houses

  7. Miguel Castejon says:

    And when will there be better cleaning on our beaches? I believe that the same people who propose are voting because if what has come out is considered the most important, turn it off and let's see.

  8. Pablo Tomas says:

    We must add the lack of lighting in the promenade area in Raset. Everything done by the city council is pure advertising

  9. Vecino says:

    Obviously you have to think. And these politicians are there to get paid, feed their ego, and take photos, not to think.

  10. It says:

    Plant trees…. Double expense, first they plant them and then they cut them down…. Trees of the station, palm trees at the entrance to Dénia….
    This game must be fun for the City Council.
    Bravo for the intelligent Zebra crossings, but... when will the noise and speed controls be implemented on our streets, highways and avenues?

    • Maria says:

      I agree with your opinion.

    • Claudio says:

      I say the same thing, for when the controls at night and early morning of the noises of dad's boys with their motorcycles, speeding, racing, shouting, playing ball, and all this happens 50 meters from the police station National. The epicenter of all this is Calderón Street, the new hotel and the quarantine restaurant. This area we do not have a police service, the national one and even less the local one, all this happens every night, from 23:00 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. :XNUMX in the morning.

      • Maria says:

        This does not only happen in your area... and from experience, it is wrong for them to take it into account, there are many things that do not exist for them...

    • Richard says:

      In our city you can go 120 km per hour no matter how much of a 30-mile signal there is, hear a motorcycle 800 meters away and unload with trucks that make an infernal noise. But nothing happens here...


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