The Aldeatejada City Council held its ordinary plenary session for the month of March this Monday afternoon, marked by the approval of new animal coexistence regulations and adjustments to local taxation.
During the session, Ángel Antúnez took office as the new councilor of the corporation, occupying the seat of Cristina López, who presented her resignation last February.
One of the main points on the agenda has been the unanimous approval of the new Feline Colony Management Program. With this measure, the City Council intends to continue the sterilization process that began in 2022 through an agreement with a veterinary clinic.
The plan is committed to ethical and sustainable management that will begin with a mapping and census of the specimens to plan sterilizations, which will include ear tagging, deworming, vaccination and microchip identification.
Within the framework of this program, the City Council has strictly regulated the feeding of animals to guarantee urban hygiene. The figure of the “authorized feeder” has been created, which requires prior registration in the municipal registry or in the electronic headquarters.
These people must comply with specific training requirements and commit to supplying only dry feed, avoiding the use of food scraps that could generate dirt or sources of infection. Likewise, the document establishes clear protocols for the management of possible neighborhood conflicts derived from the presence of these colonies in the municipality.
In the economic section, the plenary session has approved, with the abstention of the socialist group, a modification of the ordinance regulating the Real Estate Tax. The change responds to the need to repeal the bonuses related to the installation of non-solar renewable energy systems, such as aerothermal or geothermal.
As explained by the Councilor for Economy, Patricia López, these bonuses were approved last year under legal coverage that, since it was not subsequently validated by the Congress of Deputies, has lost its validity. In the absence of a rule of law that protects this aid, the City Council has been forced to adjust the ordinance to current legislation.
