Work Detail |
Posadas: “The contracted public works will be sustained”
The agreement will not be breached and external financing will be sought for what is “priority,” Mayor Leonardo “Lalo” Stelatto assured FM de las Misiones
One of the questions that will require a period of waiting, until we have certainty from the Government of Javier Milei - who takes office on Sunday - revolves around the continuity of public works.
Regarding this issue, the certainty that Leonardo Stelatto gave to FM 89.3 Santa María de las Misiones had to do with the national works that are already underway. “I understand that they will have continuity as changes occur in the organizations that finance them. Surely there will be a survey of what has been financed so far to see how it continues,” he anticipated.
And he added: “It is a panorama that we have to be attentive to, but there are issues with some works that are necessary, they must be within an external financing scheme to be able to give it continuity.”
“A loan has been taken out with an external bank, which has been confirmed through a contract with the aim of carrying out solutions in different parts of the country,” he added.
In that vein, for the head of the communal Executive, the burying of Route 213, the Urban Crossing works, which changed the local physiognomy "would not have to go into the chainsaw."
“They are signed contracts with planned financing. "We have to see what scheme they enter into, and if it is with external financing they have to continue, because there is a contractual commitment," he stated, although he stated that it is not clear which public works will have that financing and which will not.
Asphalted
Another issue that, for the moment, would not be a serious problem to address is the progress with the paving of new streets and avenues, because a large part "of this work that we have done was done with human resources from the municipality and our and rented equipment and with the purchase of inputs,” he explained.
“We do not hire companies and that is why we were able to move freely throughout the ejido, which led us to large works such as access to El Porvenir II and San Isidro, |