The Socialist Group in the Tinajo City Council has denounced this Wednesday the "serious situation of administrative discontrol" and "the lack of political will" of the municipal government that, according to what they have stated in a press release, "reveals the internal control report" corresponding to the year 2024.
In the opinion of the PSOE, the document prepared by the Municipal Intervention is "devastating and objectively confirms what the socialists have been denouncing for some time": "The City Council does not comply with the basic rules of economic management and continues accumulating deficiencies without correcting them."
The spokesperson for the PSOE in Tinajo, Begoña Hernández, has lamented that, "despite the repeated warnings from the technicians, the mayor Jesús Machín has chosen to look the other way and perpetuate a management model marked by disorganization, the lack of planning and the total absence of transparency.”
Hernández has warned that the report reflects an economic management "plagued with objections from the Intervention that, in many cases, have been ignored by the presidency of the City Council." Thus, she has indicated that "actions have been registered without due legal control, omissions of the intervention function and serious deficiencies in the control of the subsidies granted." In addition, it points out the "inexistence of a contracting department", which, according to the socialists, "has generated a disordered processing of municipal contracts and a repeated and unjustified use of minor contracts, failing to comply with the Public Sector Contracts Law."
The PSOE of Tinajo has considered it "especially serious" that, despite the fact that the report requires the preparation of an action plan to correct the detected deficiencies, said plan "has not been prepared or approved, flagrantly violating state regulations." "The lack of resources cannot continue to be an excuse. If the government group does not have the capacity to manage with guarantees, what it should do is assume responsibilities and give way to those who are willing to do so,” Begoña Hernández concluded.