Post by account_disabled on Mar 13, 2024 1:15:49 GMT -5
What has become of the promises that Isabel Díaz Ayuso made to the people of Madrid on her way to Puerta del Sol? After the analysis carried out by idealista/news on the eight most significant proposals of the 2019 electoral program regarding housing, six can be considered fulfilled and two as unfulfilled, although the latter are especially relevant.
Ayuso's management of public housing is suspended; of the 25,000 promised, only 1,300 have been delivered, although there are a total of 9,500 homes approved in different phases of execution. Nor has he fulfilled the promise of a new land law, the drafting of which remains pending – if the demoscopy does not fail – for the next legislature.
They approve their urban regeneration policies, highly Phone Lead focused on maximizing resources and providing greater autonomy to municipalities, and modernizing the housing stock. Among others, promises regarding tax reductions to encourage renting and purchasing a home after a birth have also been fulfilled .
“Guarantee access to housing for all Madrid residents” was one of the highlights of the program with which Isabel Díaz Ayuso ran for the presidency of the Community of Madrid in 2019. The vote placed her as the second most voted list, only behind that of the PSOE.
Finally, the popular won the presidency of the Madrid Assembly thanks to a government pact with Ciudadanos and the support of Vox. Alliance that did not need to be repeated after the 2021 elections, when the team led by Ayuso achieved 44.3% of the Madrid votes, a result of unprecedented magnitude in the history of elections in this autonomy.
We put the magnifying glass on housing management in the last four years, the cornerstone of a strategic sector for the Madrid community such as real estate. According to data from the autonomous government itself, it represents 14% of its GDP and the same percentage of employment.
Promise: “We will work for the regeneration of our cities, promoting the rehabilitation of buildings and regulating the possibility that they can be expanded for this purpose to eliminate, for example, substandard housing.”
The Omnibus Law of December 21, 2022 included proposals for urban use of urban land. In this way, it places in municipal hands a tool to “combine the needs of general and individual interest by making viable an operation on consolidated urban land that would not otherwise be possible.
“In this sense,” they continue to explain from the Housing Department, “an operator who owns a land whose buildability is already exhausted and who needs to carry out an increase in it, may purchase from another operator who owns another land in the same scope that objective use that has not been exhausted or does not plan to be exhausted, with the limits established in the new regulation.
Ayuso's management of public housing is suspended; of the 25,000 promised, only 1,300 have been delivered, although there are a total of 9,500 homes approved in different phases of execution. Nor has he fulfilled the promise of a new land law, the drafting of which remains pending – if the demoscopy does not fail – for the next legislature.
They approve their urban regeneration policies, highly Phone Lead focused on maximizing resources and providing greater autonomy to municipalities, and modernizing the housing stock. Among others, promises regarding tax reductions to encourage renting and purchasing a home after a birth have also been fulfilled .
“Guarantee access to housing for all Madrid residents” was one of the highlights of the program with which Isabel Díaz Ayuso ran for the presidency of the Community of Madrid in 2019. The vote placed her as the second most voted list, only behind that of the PSOE.
Finally, the popular won the presidency of the Madrid Assembly thanks to a government pact with Ciudadanos and the support of Vox. Alliance that did not need to be repeated after the 2021 elections, when the team led by Ayuso achieved 44.3% of the Madrid votes, a result of unprecedented magnitude in the history of elections in this autonomy.
We put the magnifying glass on housing management in the last four years, the cornerstone of a strategic sector for the Madrid community such as real estate. According to data from the autonomous government itself, it represents 14% of its GDP and the same percentage of employment.
Promise: “We will work for the regeneration of our cities, promoting the rehabilitation of buildings and regulating the possibility that they can be expanded for this purpose to eliminate, for example, substandard housing.”
The Omnibus Law of December 21, 2022 included proposals for urban use of urban land. In this way, it places in municipal hands a tool to “combine the needs of general and individual interest by making viable an operation on consolidated urban land that would not otherwise be possible.
“In this sense,” they continue to explain from the Housing Department, “an operator who owns a land whose buildability is already exhausted and who needs to carry out an increase in it, may purchase from another operator who owns another land in the same scope that objective use that has not been exhausted or does not plan to be exhausted, with the limits established in the new regulation.