Euro Weekly News - Costa Blanca South 5 - 11 August 2021 Issue 1883

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News

The people’s paper Issue No. 1883

5 - 11 August 2021

High season

PROMISES KEPT Photo credit: Torrevieja town hall

AS August began and Spanish tourists flocked to the coast, Spain’s rail operator Renfe programmed 13 AVE high speed trains with double the normal number of carriages between Madrid and Alicante.

COSTA BLANCA SOUTH • WWW.EUROWEEKLYNEWS.COM

Extra cover PILAR DE LA HORADADA’S municipal ambulance service has added another vehicle which will operate 12 hours daily until August 30 in addition to the ambulance on call 24 hours daily.

Bonfire app PROVINCIAL council, the Diputacion, launched its Control Foc app that reduces the risk of forest fires by monitoring agricultural bonfires and minimising the danger involved in burning tree-prunings and weeds.

No case AN Elche judge shelved a complaint lodged by the VOX party against Crevillent’s mayor and a councillor for not removing the LGTBI rainbow flag draped over the town hall balcony.

€2.478 MILLION SOLUTION: Eduardo Dolon details measures to prevent Torreta Florida flooding. WORK on infrastructure to pre‐ vent sewage spills in Torrevieja’s Torreta Florida will begin before the end of this month. Mayor Eduardo Dolon and Ur‐ ban Services councillor, Sandra Sanchez, recently organised a meeting to talk residents through the €2.478 million solution that will prevent the spills and flooding that occur after exceptionally heavy rain. Dolon and Sanchez were ac‐ companied by executives from AGAMED, the company that pro‐

vides Torrevieja’s water supply and main drainage system. It is AGAMED, in which the town hall has a 26 per cent holding, that will carry out the vital infrastructure modifications that residents have repeatedly requested in recent years. The Torreta Florida project un‐ derlined the local government’s commitment to its residents, point‐ ed out Dolon, who confirmed that the contract has been put out to tender and work would begin be‐

fore the end of August. At present, the main drainage system must also cope with huge amounts of rainwater during peri‐ ods of heavy rain, Dolon explained. This overloads the network, result‐ ing in the sewage spills that have occurred four times in the last two years. Storm drains in some zones will divert rainwater to a holding pond or to a storm tank in others. Both will gradually feed rainwater to the treatment plant for re‐use. The third part of the project in‐ volves a pumping station in Calle Clarin to carry off rainwater and prevent flooding. “The first phase should be fin‐ ished before the end of October and the likelihood of torrential au‐ tumn rains,” he said. The remainder would be carried out during the first three months of 2022, Dolon pledged.

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