The controversy over the pending reception of the two urbanizations of La Quinta opens a new chapter in the courts after the La Quinta de Chimaque Neighbors Association has decided to file a complaint with the Prosecutor’s Office against the mayor of the municipality, Juan Acosta (AISU), and the rest of the members of the local government when they understand that it could There is some type of crime in the provision of some public services in some urbanizations that “the City Council itself still considers private.”
The president of this neighborhood group, Jorge Andrés Pérez Hernández, explains in a letter sent to the associates that “on December 3, 2021, the president of the La Quinta de Chimaque Neighbors Association, on behalf of this and in compliance with the mandate conferred by the associates, a written complaint before the Provincial Prosecutor’s Office of Santa Cruz de Tenerife against the mayor-president of the municipality of Santa Úrsula, Juan Acosta, and against the rest of the members of the government commission ”.
«The objective of this complaint is to inform the Prosecutor’s Office of the actions of the Santa Úrsula Town Hall that, on the one hand, it has expressly stated and in writing that the non-provision of certain basic public services in La Quinta is due to its status as private property and, on the other hand, it invests public resources in the provision of certain other services in the same urbanization ”, as detailed by Pérez.
This group details that “the purpose of this action is for the Prosecutor’s Office to study the possible criminal significance of the events described through, if appropriate, the appropriate investigation procedures.” This neighborhood group has not wanted to detail to EL DÍA the exact content of its complaint on the grounds that “there are many references to specific cases and directly affected neighbors.”
On October 24, 2021, around a hundred people participated in a demonstration called by the La Quinta de Chimaque Neighborhood Association to demand better public services from the City Council in two developments that the City Council still does not receive after years of unsuccessful negotiations. They demanded more public lighting; better maintenance of roads, sidewalks and green areas; more security; better accesses, and adequate pest control.