
On January 18, a landslide forced the closure of the pedestrian walkway that joins Radazul Bajo and Tabaiba Baja, two population centers that, despite overlapping on the coast of El Rosario, have no other point of direct communication. This step saves them having to get in the car, access the highway and cross to the other side.
They have been like this for more than a month, a time that, according to the affected neighbors, they do not know how long it will last, since, they point out, they have not received any response in this regard from the El Rosario City Council. They point out that the rocks that interrupt the passage have not even been removed from the promenade.
The neighbors accuse the Rosariero Consistory of “laziness”, which, they assure, has not communicated any information to them about when or how normality will be restored.
In addition, those affected say they are “outraged” by this lack of response and municipal action in the face of their repeated complaints about the blocking of the important access road to the two residential enclaves, assuring that the only thing they have received in response is that “the the technicians are assessing”.
DIARIO DE AVISOS has contacted the City Council of El Rosario, from where they state that “the project is being drafted by a specialized company for the rehabilitation of various strips of the lower area of the slope”, adding that, in the meantime , “the trail will remain closed for security reasons.”
“As soon as the project is available, the bidding for the work will be processed by the emergency mechanism to shorten the deadlines,” they conclude from the Consistory, which, therefore, still does not have a date for the start of work.
If this path of only 340 meters did not exist, to access Tabaiba beach from the end of Avenida de Colón in Radazul, residents without a car would have to travel approximately 2,400 meters, climb 150 meters of unevenness to the highway, travel about 850 meters along a pedestrian parallel to the motorway, reach the end of Calle Belgium and descend about 200 steps to the beach, as described in the project that gave the green light to the creation of this path in 2010.