The Minister of Education, Rocío Lucas, yesterday regretted the “silence in response” and the “contempt” that, she assured, the Spanish Government gives to the Council’s demands to obtain information on the deadlines for implementation of the project. THE Center for Innovation, Technology and High Performance for Professional Training (Quote) in Segovia.
According to Lucas, during his speech at the plenary session of the Cortés in response to the question from the socialist lawyer Alicia Palomo on the actions that the Council is carrying out to make this center a reality, the Autonomous Government “does not know nothing about this matter.” ” “because neither the Ministry of Education, nor the Presidency nor the Vice-Presidency of the Government “reported anything each time we asked.”
For this reason, the Minister of Education assured that it is a “new contempt of the government towards Castilla y León in Segovia”, with a “unilateral” decision not to carry it out which is added to the announcement made “during an electoral period” of its implementation, for which he invited the socialists to ask the Ministry of Education “why he said yes and then no”. Palomo, for his part, recalled the annual investment made by the government for the installation of this center in the capital of Segovia. has 2.5 million, but he regretted that the city’s mayor, José Mazarias, “disdains this opportunity for Segovia.”
It is for this reason that he asked the Board of Directors “to act on the matter and demand that the mayor “abandon his unnecessary boycott” of a center “designed to be a reference in matters of innovation in professional training” and which represents “an opportunity to diversify the offer”. development possibilities of Segovia,” reports Ical.
Was the general secretary of the FP of the Ministry of Education, Clara Sanz, who deemed the project “unviable” specifying that the current Town Hall had reduced it to 655 square meters – a third – with a maintenance expense of 142,450 euros. “El Citar is a very large project, which cannot be expanded,” precisely argued Sanz de Segovia. For his part, the city mayor denounced “that they based their decision on major errors” after 15 months of continuous work “to accelerate any possibility of the project becoming a reality.” Thus, Mazarias expressed his dissatisfaction with the “mistreatment and deception” of the government “which hides the reality of a project that never existed.”