The municipal spokeswoman for the socialist PSOE, Jennifer Miranda, reproaches Atogo for suffering the same problems “year after year without anyone finding a solution.” She assures this after holding a meeting with local residents and taking note of “questions as basic as the low pressure of the water supply” suffered by the local population or the poor public lighting, “which goes out every time it rains.” .
Among the neighborhood claims “of a place with many shortcomings in basic public services”, the socialists stand out and show concern “for the non-existent leisure offer” in a town far from the big centers, “which they have left without activities for young people and adults, forcing them to move to San Isidro,” says Miranda.
The list of shortcomings drawn up by the PSOE during the meeting “with a large group of residents of Atogo” includes, among the most important issues raised by those affected, “the insecurity of the roads.” They explain that on the roads of the town there are many that circulate at high speeds, a fact that is recorded, “especially in times close to the Atogo rally.” In this sense, the socialist spokeswoman demands “a greater police presence and the installation of speed reducers on the road that crosses the town.”
It so happens that the population complains about “the lack of pavement and the unfortunate state of the existing one.” The consequence is that they are forced to use the road to walk around the town. In this sense, Jennifer Miranda proposes “carrying out a study of accessibility and improvement of the pavement that allows residents to move calmly through their town.”