The candidate of Coalición Canaria to the City Council of San Bartolomé, David Rocío, requests information on the procedure followed for the hiring of several people through the Alternating Training Program with Employment (PFAE), "after complaints from several neighbors who have denounced irregularities in the selection of students and management and support staff who have been chosen for these courses," the party says.
And, according to what they have told the candidate, among "the management staff hired are two PSOE members residing in the municipality of Tías," they comment, political party that "governs both in San Bartolomé and in the City Council presided over by José Juan Cruz." "Two members who, in addition, have a direct connection with Cruz," he points out.
“It is striking that one of them is the brother of the mayor of Tías, who was also a councilor in that City Council in the last legislature, and that the other was also on the socialist lists of the same Consistory,” emphasizes David Rocío.
Therefore, he emphasizes that “there are many questions that the mayor of San Bartolomé will have to clarify about the procedure that has been carried out: how both the participants and the management and support staff were selected, what was the system that was followed and who were the people responsible for that selection”.
“If everything was done correctly, they will have no problem providing us with the information,” adds Rocío. The spokesperson recalls that the PFAEs "are public employment-training programs, aimed at unemployed people without specific training in a profession," and that "their objective is to facilitate access to work through learning and professional experience in an occupation."
"They demonstrate the PSOE's contempt for its neighbors"
Thus, he emphasizes that this type of action "demonstrates the PSOE's contempt for its neighbors" and insists that “we do not understand why administrative or management personnel from the municipality of Tías have been hired, as if there were no unemployed administrative staff in San Bartolomé," they point out. Adding that "we understand even less that these people may be directly linked to that party."
In addition, he points out that "someone will have to assume the consequences of this irregularity”.








