SANTA CRUZ DE TENERIFE, September 6 (EUROPA PRESS) –
The Deputy of the Common, Rafael Yanes, informed this Wednesday the president of the Canary Islands, Fernando Clavijo, that at the end of the month he will present in Parliament the extraordinary report that the institution has prepared on the housing situation on the islands.
At the meeting, Yanes conveyed to the president the set of citizens’ most common complaints.
Furthermore, these days he has met with the president of the Parliament’s disability commission, Ana Oramas, who has expressed her desire to know what the people’s complaints are “that are not resolved by the Canarian public administrations.”
In addition, he indicated that he wants to suggest to the spokespersons of the Disability Commission that certain people appear “who know about the demands of issues that can be resolved immediately” in labor, health, educational or municipal issues.
“There is a lot to advance and I am sure that the Common Deputy will convey to me the complaints of the Canarian citizens, therefore, it is my first performance with the president,” she noted in a note sent by the institution.
The Common Deputy, for his part, highlighted that in five years as president this is the first time that the presidency of a commission has visited him and clarified that the areas of Dependency and Disability are the main issues of complaint from citizens.
“The dependency breaches are so serious that they have gone unnoticed in terms of Disability. Right now there are 6 months that the administrations have, but the administration itself gives 27 months, which more than a figure is a reality in which many people lose their job,” he commented.
Furthermore, Yanes, after seeing the interest in Disability organizations on the part of the president of the commission, added that they will give her a complete list of the groups so that she can summon them to the parliamentary commission.
He also told him that when they present the housing report they will make another disability report throughout 2024 “with a series of proposals for parliament to debate and find a way to correct this situation that is absolutely unfair for citizens.”