Citizen Alternative has insisted that after that date, evictions have continued to be carried out, such as the one on September 20, when "thanks to media coverage, the eviction of a family in Arrecife was known." That day, Caty Villalonga and her 17-year-old son were left on the street.
Alternative has stated that the president of the Cabildo, Pedro San Ginés, has been asked "if any procedure has been initiated to find out which banking entities are still carrying out evictions in Lanzarote and if there is any contractual relationship with any of those entities." However, the president has limited himself to responding that the motion that was approved "not exactly in those terms, that all the entities with which the Cabildo works carry out evictions and that fair evictions are also carried out because there are many shameless people who do not pay", according to Alternative.
From Alternative, they have recalled that this agreement of May 5 "was indeed approved in those terms." In this sense, it has pointed out that the eighth point of said motion stated verbatim that "those contracts and the withdrawal of funds that the Cabildo of Lanzarote could have should be extinguished in those financial entities that, as of the date of this agreement, continue to carry out certain mortgage foreclosures, after a technical report from Social Welfare that considers socially unfair evictions, a positive report from the Legal Service and Economic Supervision."
On the other hand, the motion requested "to urge the Island Councils, Government and Parliament of the Canary Islands and the City Councils, to join this initiative of withdrawing public funds." With this, the Cabildo wanted to "transmit to the Canary Islands citizens, the firm commitment of support of all public powers to the most vulnerable and unprotected sector of the population."
Given the "importance" of this matter, Citizen Alternative has requested that "all necessary means be put in place to fully implement the commitment made to support citizens who find themselves in this situation of helplessness when they are forced to face an eviction."