Post by account_disabled on Mar 10, 2024 6:50:36 GMT
José Luis Langa, president of the Canarian platform of those affected, points out that the problem affects sixty-four municipalities and more than 150,000 people. The Department of Ecological Transition, Fight against Climate Change and Territorial Planning of the Government of the Canary Islands has officially established the Joint Commission on those affected by the Coastal Law, thus complying with a cooperation protocol signed in 2016 by the Executive with the different platforms involved. The Canary Islands Federation of Islands, Fecai, the Municipal Federation, Fecam, the Canary Islands Government itself and the platform of those affected by the Coastal Law participate in the commission, whose president, José Luis Langa, hopes for maximum collaboration between the institutions to resolve a problem that affects sixty-four municipalities on the islands and more than 150,000 people: “Now what we have to do is get to work for the benefit of the numerous families affected.
Singularities of the Canary Islands Langa points out that the solutions have to be given “from here”, seeking the legal mechanism to disaffect the different areas affected by the law, a “very arduous job that requires a lot of study” and in which it will be necessary to elucidate, in each case, if they fall within the powers that are transferred to the islands. He considers that, in the long term, we must seek to modify the Coastal Law itself so that it takes into account the singularities of the Canary Islands, equivalent to what was done WhatsApp Number List with the island of Formentera, in the Balearic Islands. They warn of the presence of false lawyers in the south of Tenerife Bar Association of Santa Cruz de Tenerife | Photo: ICATF Bar Association of Santa Cruz de Tenerife | Photo: ICATF We spoke with José Manuel Niederleytner García-Libreros, dean of the Bar Association of Santa Cruz de Tenerife, about a professional intrusion that can be detrimental to those who hire them. The Bar Association of Santa Cruz de Tenerife warns of the increase in false lawyers operating in the south of Tenerife.
The dean of the institution, José Manuel Niederleytner García-Libreros, points out that, although on their web pages they present themselves as lawyers, the truth is that they are not duly registered, which means that their advice can be, at best, wrong, and at worst, harmful to the client. He points out that these lawyers are offered mainly to foreign people, who do not know Spanish regulations or who would not know how to verify if they are registered. He indicates that it has been the registered lawyers who have denounced this situation when they saw that the opposing party may be advised by someone who is not registered. On other occasions it happens that it is the affected people themselves who go to the School. Currently, a dozen cases are being investigated before filing a complaint in court for professional intrusion. The School has launched an outreach campaign in which people are made aware of the convenience of going to the school to verify affiliation. Likewise, they have thought about different mechanisms to improve the identification of registered lawyers.