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A antidesahucios and stop having institutional representation in processions pact among the first measures of the government

15 June 2015 - 15: 58

The mayor of Denia, Vicent Grimalt, This morning gathered the spokesmen of the political groups that constitute the city council for the first time this legislature to transfer some of the first measures that his government is going to adopt.

The first of them is related to the General Structural Plan, and it is a question of requesting to the secretary of the city council a Legal report on the current status of the contract signed with the previous drafting team. At the same time, the municipal architect will be asked to provide another technical report on the draft general plan for the unfavorable reports issued on the document, what modifications must be made to correct them with the intention of getting to work "sooner".

First meeting of speakers in the City of Dénia

Among the measures to be taken, Grimalt has delivered to the spokespersons a antidesahucios pact For its study and elevation to the ordinary plenary that will be held at the end of the month.

With regard to the municipal plenary sessions, the mayor has announced that from now on Will be held at 19 hours And not to the 14 as it had been habitual in the last years so that it can attend a greater number of public. The information commissions will also be held in the afternoons, with some justified exceptions.

Finally the mayor has transferred to the spokespersons the intention of the members of the Corporation Cease to have institutional representation in religious processions that are celebrated in the city and that who wants to participate, do it in a personal capacity.

Comments
  1. llucia says:

    Let's see if we speak properly. Laws are created by governments, not municipalities. Therefore, it is difficult for Mr. Grimalt to approve a Law, when it is not the city council who has to do it. Read the news well. It will make a kind of "norm" for that subject, but it will not be regulated by law.
    I too am linked to the Holy Blood and I have to say that many of us are annoyed that the new government team "prohibits" councilors from attending it. I put it in quotation marks, because it seems that that word bothers. But that is the reality. If he doesn't want to go, don't let him go. But do not force the rest of the corporation NOT to go.
    As for the masses ... Does the mayor intend to attend them? Well, I'll tell you four things.

  2. Dalmace says:

    Good measures! In this country we must end the confusion between religion and management of the country.

  3. Monica says:

    Well for the new schedule of plenary sessions that allow more assistance from citizens and the haste to approve the antidesahucios law ... because I have cases of very close people with young children and it is a drama. The approval of the law of not having an institutional obligation to attend the processions, of course, should not be the most urgent. .but soon we have the procession of the Holy Blood, of which I have the honor to participate, and I encourage everyone who really loves and feels the devotion, to accompany us. And those who do not do so because they do not, because they notice the little gain and that hurts us and offends more.

  4. Monica says:

    They will stop having to go, yes or yes. That is to stop having institutional representation. Go, anyone can go. It says nothing to prohibit. ..and whoever wants to go to mass .. let's be more tolerant and read the news well. I who went to a school of nuns ... they taught me that it is a sin to "put weeds". And my opinion as mayoralesa ... is that whoever really feels and wants to go ... not to take a walk and show palm ... that everything is not going ... it is how it goes ...

    • again says:

      Very well Monica, but what has been said could be summarized, as José Mota would say…. »If we have to go, go …… .but go… to go….»

  5. Arthur says:

    As the mayor does not like to go to processions, he prohibits it. Very good for the show of tolerance towards the believers. And more, when their own councilors or mayor of Jesús Pobre have participated in recent years. I hope I don't find it at masses ...

  6. again says:

    And this going to the processions is Denia's big problem ??

  7. Antonietta says:

    Full well by the 19h and by removing the mayor from the first row of the procession, the practice of religion is a private act, not public!

    • Bathsheba Everdene says:

      What a ridiculous! A private act a procession? As far as I know, the processions are on the street, in full view of everyone, like a pasacalle fallero or the Entrâ de Moros y Cristianos. Will the City Council stop being present at these parties because not all of us are Fallas or Moors? A procession is a PUBLIC act. What is not, nor should it be, is an INSTITUTIONAL act. The Entrà is not an institutional act either, why then should the City Council be represented?

      • again says:

        Look, all these are "very cool ... cool gestures", from the new wave of municipalities, one that goes by subway, another by bicycle, that we do not go to the procession (nobody forces them) ...? After the procession, there are Prawns… ..? No… I can't go, I'm a layman.
        Well, you will have to wait and see when you start to work, after parking your bicycle.Example, bad sidewalks and dirty, infected regachos, sunbathing beach front, house occupied and in ruins .., let's go, even by bike To take a walk on the road to Les Marines

      • Antonietta says:

        Religion, not processions!
        Religion is something spiritual, not cane after the procession, did not you know.


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