News
LOCAL NEWS - TUESDAY 17 JANUARY 2012
Mark Nolan / 2012-01-16 20:00:19
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ALICANTE TOWN HALL TO INVESTIGATE FAIRGROUND INCIDENT
Alicante town hall has announced that it is to launch an investigation after 7 people were injured on a Spiderman ride at a mobile fairground.
A warning alarm sounded on the ride on Sunday, which resulted in the extended arms returning to their initial positions at speed, causing the injuries to those on board.
The ride met all safety standards and inspections and was fully legal and certified but has now been moved to Valencia for further examination.
PARKING RESTRICTIONS IN ORIHUELA
A new ‘Orange Zone’ for parking will be implemented in Orihuela this week, where only those vehicles displaying resident permits will be permitted to park. Any other vehicle parked in the zone will be fined and risk being towed away.
The move is said to be in compensation to residents of the city who have suffered through the pedestrianisation of many of the streets. SO far, 182 permits have been readed for issue to those who have already applied under the scheme.
YOUNG OFFENDERS PUT TO WORK
The Alicante judicial service has signed an agreement with the fire consortium this week, that would see young offenders being put to work cleaning and maintaining fire stations, rather than incarceration in young offender institutions.
The plan is to force them to “make payment of benefits to the community or socio tasks aimed at facilitating the development of social competence”.
EVICTION EVADED IN TORREVIEJA
Members of a collective who set out to represent families with financial difficulties managed to prevent the eviction of an unemployed couple in Torrevieja who had not been able to pay their mortgage since 2008.
Joanna María Rendón says that she suffered an accident at work in 2007, and has been unable to find employment since. She is awaiting an interview with a medical board in February to see if she would be entitled to disability benefits.
Various groups across Spain have been involved in similar incidents before, physically blocking access to premises so as to prevent evictions being carried out.
VALENCIANO LANGUAGE COMPLAINT FROM PATIENT
A former patient at a hospital in Crevillente has filed a complaint with the department of health, after he claims to have been refused treatment due to the fact he was speaking in the native Valencian language, Valenciano.
The man also claims that hospital staff refused to deal with his request to see another doctor and that he was spoken to in a “sarcastic” manner.
The matter is now being dealt with as a potentially criminal case, as the claim is that a public service was denied on the grounds of language discrimination.








