Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta school. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta school. Mostrar todas las entradas

The rainy They left one more victim in the apartment of the Tolimawhere a minor was dragged by the growing of a ravine just at the moment when he was trying to cross it on foot to go to his school.

The unfortunate news happened this Friday in the village of La Paloma, municipality of Planadas, southern Tolima, where 13-year-old Emmanuel Azcárate Rodríguez drowned.

The teenager lost his life when he was walking towards the San Pedro Educational Institution, located in that village that is part of the Nasa We’sx indigenous reservation, in the municipality of Planadas, a region 8 hours by car from Ibagué.

Growing

The rising water came with a lot of sediment that hit and drowned the 13-year-old boy.

Gildardo Varón Paya, indigenous governor, pointed out that “the rising of the ravine swept him away in the blink of an eye. The boy was on foot and suddenly he was caught by the rising that came down with stones and sticks. Emmanuel was a student who all Every day he took this route to go to school and return home”.

In strong and prolonged winters, the La Paloma ravine becomes dangerous and the indigenous community and students must cross it, running multiple dangers.

The ravine, about 8 meters wide, had a wooden bridge with ropes that was built manually by the community, but a few months ago it was demolished by a flood.

“We all cross it on foot, but the situation is very difficult in the rainy months like the ones we have this year,” said community residents.

According to the balance of the Tolima authorities, this year the winter has already left 5 people dead, mainly due to landslides in the municipalities of Palocabildo, Casabianca and Planadas.

With a sit-in, the educational community of the Cristóbal Colón Institution, Social Welfare headquarters, demanded this Thursday morning the reconstruction of their school, a work that should have started five years ago, in the Mariano Ramos neighborhood.

(You can read: Cali as a District could have up to seven minor mayors)

“They sold us the idea that the project had all the security conditions to be executed in the shortest time possible. Officials from the Educational Infrastructure Fund came from Bogotá to socialize the implementation of the long-awaited dream, presenting it to us, as the infrastructure work, not only the most modern in Colombia, but also the safest in contractual terms,” ​​said the community, who grew tired of the breaches.

On that occasion they were assured that the works would be delivered within eight months.

However, according to the community, the first contractor who undertook the reconstruction of the school, failed to comply and left the work abandoned.

(We recommend: They order the dismantling of structures without a license in La Sagrada Familia in Cali)

While the college is being rebuilt, students have passed from side to side to receive classes.

The Mayor’s Office of Cali leased a building where classes are currently held. “Property, which although it is true is notoriously better than the previous one, it is also true that it presents a series of complexities that make the provision of educational services for our Children and Adolescents a continuous biosafety risk.”

Given the current situation, the educational community proposes to start, starting next week, “the peak and plate strategy by degrees, in order to reduce by a
percentage the amount of population and thus manage to improve something, the difficulties of overcrowding that occur in the building
“, and postpone the start of the single day until the conditions for improvement in the building are met, which lacks sufficient sanitary batteries.

CALI

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Due to the lack of school transportation, a group of children belonging to the rural educational institution San Rafael, in Calarcá, Quindío, decided to interrupt traffic for several hours in one of the short tunnels of the via the line.

The students blocked the Cóndor de los Andes tunnel with the purpose of drawing the attention of the authorities so that they expedite the contracting of the rural school transport service and that minors do not continue exposing themselves while they travel the road or asking for a quota from drivers who pass by this road.

“It’s already March and they don’t have transportation. Many live in the upper part and have to go down on foot, exposing themselves to the road. Many muleteers do us the favor of taking them down, but if something happens to one of the children, the muleteer gets into a problem,” denounced Marina García, a relative of one of the students.

The attendant added that every year is the same. “We had to make this sit-in so that they listen to us and that the rights of children are not vulnerable. There are parents who take up to 3 or 4 children on a motorcycle, so much delay with the school transport contract is not fair“.

The school transport of the institution’s students corresponds to the Mayor’s Office of Calarcá, but the entity reported that the process is currently in the stage of awarding the contract.

The Secretary of the Government of Calarcá, Juan David Ospina Salcedo, assured that next Monday the school transport service would start operating. “The commitment to the community is that on Monday the service is provided in this village and in the others in Calarcá,” he said.

The Line Tunnel

Children blocked traffic in the Condor de los Andes tunnel.

They did this school and they did not put signage on it, nobody knows that there is a school in this area, it has nothing, it does not have internet, it is a school abandoned by everyone

Parents and students warned that if next Monday they do not have the service; they will once again block the passage in La Linea.

This educational institution is located in the village of San Rafael, next to the dual carriageway that leads to the La Línea tunnel. A few years ago it was relocated a few meters higher because one of the viaducts of the Central Cordillera Crossing project passed by the educational campus.

“They did this school and they did not put signage on it, nobody knows that there is a school in this area, it has nothing, it does not have internet, it is a school abandoned by everyone,” García claimed.

The Mayor’s Office of Calarcá and the Secretary of Education of Quindío will send a request to the National Institute of Roads (Invías) for the installation of signage on the road, a speed reducer and installation of a sign announcing the location of the campus to avoid accidents.


New York Gov. Kathy Hochul announced Sunday that the statewide masking requirement in schools will be lifted by March 2.

In a briefing held in Albany, the Democrat cited declining COVID-19 cases and guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

She said counties and cities could keep their own mandates in place, and parents could still choose to send their kids to school in masks.

The new rules effective Wednesday apply to children 2 years and older in childcare facilities. New York State has 2.7 million schoolchildren, including about 1 million in New York City.

Earlier this month, Hochul let a broad mask mandate for most indoor settings expire, but said the schools’ requirement would remain in place. She had promised to revisit the schools question by the first week of March.

The broad mask mandate was implemented during a COVID-19 surge fueled by the omicron variant of the coronavirus in December.

Masks are still required in some places, including public transit.

The murder of Nickol Valentina, the 15-year-old girl who left her school on Thursday at 4:50 in the afternoon, has shocked the entire educational community of the Normal Superior School of Bucaramanga.

(You may be interested in: Video: Nickol Valentina, 15, was murdered for stealing her cell phone)

Nickol was going down the stairs of the tunnel of the Mesón de los Bucaros interchange when she was attacked by a criminal who stabbed her for stealing her cell phone. The minor was found minutes later by her friends lying on the stairs and covered in blood.

Although she was taken to the Santander University Hospital, died around 11:59 that same Thursday night.

After this fact, the more than 4,000 students of the institution and the parents of the family rejected the fact and asked more police support in this area through which they travel daily.

EL TIEMPO learned of a right to petition on January 25 sent by Sandra Milena Pinzón, a mother of a sixth grade minor.

In the document, the woman exposes the case of “uncleanliness and the presence of street dwellers that makes the pedestrian use of the school community, residents and visitors of the Normal Superior school sector impossible and fearful.”

This document was sent directly to the mayor of Bucaramanga, Juan Carlos Cárdenas, exactly one month ago.

“I asked for more police and cleanliness in the place, if they had listened to me today we would not be going through this so painful,” Sandra told EL TIEMPO.

(Also: Almost 3,300 cell phones are stolen every day in Colombia, according to mobile operators)

Letter to the mayor

The letter was sent to the mayor of Bucaramanga.

There are no security cameras in this tunnel, which makes identification difficult of the person in charge.

The authorities offered a reward of 50 million pesos for those who provide information on the person responsible for this crime.

From the Bucaramanga Personería they accompany the minor’s family and the personero Daniel Arenas made a forceful call to the Prosecutor’s Office to clarify the case.

BUCARAMANGA

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AUTO PLAY

Strong tremor of 5.6 degrees shakes the north and center of the countryAround 7:50 in the morning, the inhabitants of municipalities in the south of Bolívar, the metropolitan area of ​​Bucaramanga and Magdalena Medio reported a strong tremor that was also felt in neighboring departments such as Antioquia.

Tremor in Santa Rosa del Sur, Bolívar

Geological Survey of Colombia

There is damage to the infrastructure of the María Inmaculada Educational Institution in Santa Rosa Sur.

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AUTO PLAY

Strong tremor of 5.6 degrees shakes the north and center of the countryAround 7:50 in the morning, the inhabitants of municipalities in the south of Bolívar, the metropolitan area of ​​Bucaramanga and Magdalena Medio reported a strong tremor that was also felt in neighboring departments such as Antioquia.

Tremor in Santa Rosa del Sur, Bolívar

Geological Survey of Colombia

There is damage to the infrastructure of the María Inmaculada Educational Institution in Santa Rosa Sur.

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Barranquilla children's stories

The student had to be transferred to a nearby health center.

The student had to be transferred to a nearby health center.

The 9-year-old minor sustained head and facial injuries.

A minor, 9 years old, was injured this Tuesday morning, after a fence fell on him, while he was enjoying recess in the Alberto Pumarejo Educational Institutionin the municipality of Malambo (Atlantic).

(Also read: The secrets of the 100-year-old woman who overcame covid-19 in the Atlantic)

The third-grade student was eating his snack when he suddenly felt a strong blow to the head, for which he had to be transferred to a health center in the town and later to a clinic in Barranquilla.

The impact made him facial injuries and in the head. Due to the above, the relatives of the affected person asked the educational establishment for explanations, which two years later reopened its doors for face-to-face classes.

(You may be interested in: The 10 best public schools in the Caribbean: seven are from Barranquilla)

One of the attendants pointed out that the iron fence was rusty and in unsuitable conditions to receive the hundred students who have been attending for approximately a month, after the start of the 2022 school year.

According to those close to the minor, the fall of the fence would have been due to the strong winds that have Barranquilla and the coastal area in the north of the country on orange alert.

BARRANQUILLA

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The educational community of the educational institution Nuestra Señora de La Presentation, in La Virginia, Risaralda, has been waiting for more than a decade to have its own school.

Several officials on duty have promised them a new venue, but so far more than 550 preschool and elementary school children are crowded into two prefabricated classrooms that were bought by parents and a venue rented from the local church.

(Also: They investigate alleged political pressures in the Mayor’s Office of Manizales)

“Children don’t have access to computers, we keep them in suitcases, they eat snacks on the floor, we don’t have dining rooms, no kitchen, no library, nothing. We only have a building full of weeds and bats”, said the rector of the institution, Miriam Zapata.

The situation has reached such a point that students and parents decided to protest and block the La Virginia-Caldas-Antioquia highway.

(You may be interested in: Daniel Quintero will denounce threats and persecution against him before the IACHR)

Although this school dates back to 1960, it only had its own headquarters until 2012, when 12 classrooms were built on a property purchased by the Risaralda Government. Despite the fact that they had been promised 15 classrooms, the institution’s directors accommodated some 550 high school students in these rooms, but phase two of the project was missing, which involved another 550 preschool and primary students, who are the ones who are overcrowded in two rooms.

Although a part of the infrastructure was built, for almost three years it was suspended and is abandoned.

“These classrooms are deteriorated. The walls and the beams are fractured, there is a module that leaned on the other. A few months ago the contractor came, repaired everything and delivered, but it has already cracked again. They say that they will not demolish and that the inclined part is already that way, but who is going to receive that,” added Zapata.

(Keep reading: Who are the victims of the tragic road accident in the Valley?)

The Secretary of Education of Risaralda, Leonardo Gómez, told EL TIEMPO that he agreed with the community’s discomfort. “It is a mega-school contracted in 2015 and that has not complied and does not even have financial closure. Other schools in La Virginia did advance but La Presentation did not, it is our question to the Ministry”, he added.

And he added that the Ministry informed them that on Monday they will have a financial committee to finally make the financial closure of this project. “We expect good news for Risaraldenses,” he concluded.

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Antioch

The computers were stolen through this window.

Photo:

Courtesy of the Mayor’s Office of Barbosa

The computers were stolen through this window.

There were 15 teams, which were used for classes.

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Valle del Cauca has a new ‘Colegio 10’. It is the transformed Jorge Isaacs public educational institution for 965 students who live in the El Cerrito municipality.

Four years ago this change was announced with 12 new classrooms and the recovery of another 14 with 5,353 million pesos, of which the Government contributed 1,409 million.

On this same campus, in the center of the department, the students opened a library, donated by the Providencia sugar mill.

(We recommend you read: In Cali they enable property tax payments in person)

The Jorge Isaacs marching band put the note in the delivery of works of ‘Colegio 10’ with the presence of the Minister of Education, María Victoria Angulo, and the Governor of the Valley, Clara Luz Roldán.

The minister recalled that “with the Government there is 11 projects of infrastructure for more than 75,000 million pesos, Of these, four have been delivered, six are in progress and one is in the process of being reassigned”.

Governor Roldán pointed out: “We see a commitment from the National Government and a departmental government working hand in hand. We have dedicated ourselves to ensuring that our children have a quality education, an adequate meal plan and that we can improve the scores of the Saber Tests”.

(Also: Beware of false appointments to get a passport in Valle del Cauca)

‘Colegio 10’ covers 1,952 square metres, with 12 new classrooms, 14 improved classrooms, a multipurpose room, dining room, kitchen and 22 sanitary batteries.

New library, donated by the Providencia mill

With the premise of quality education, Providence gave the library to the students of Jorge Isaacs, in El Cerrito. There are 1,570 books with a catalog of 425 children’s, 348 youth, 506 news and 291 encyclopedias. Also computers and videobeam.

The general manager of the Providencia sugar mill, Vicente Borrero, said: “It is facilitating our children’s access to knowledge. Education is a way to generate equality and opportunities”.

“Providencia has always been willing to provide attention to the educational needs of the children and youth of El Cerrito; We have witnessed this with the calls for scholarships and the visits they make to us to train our students in environmental issues,” said Marhta Isabel Mera, rector of the educational institution.

“I feel very grateful to the Ingenio for this new opportunity that it offers our children and young people, to have spaces that promote education in an environment that is not only decent, but also pleasant,” she added.

In July 2021, the mill delivered a library to more than 1,500 students in the Santa Elena district.

Both projects have been advised by Library Foundationa non-profit foundation that was created by 22 private companies, to strengthen the network of public libraries in Cali and Valle.

The mill also promotes ‘Providencia Conecta’, an initiative since 2019 that provides free internet in the room in Guabas; 437 children and young people from El Placer and Amaime received the service in their homes.

The manager Vicente Borrero said that ‘After School’ will start, with the support of Fundación Único, for girls from 5 to 13 years of age from El Placer, Amaime and El Cerrito.

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This Thursday the delivery of the first 5,500 computers to the students of the 12 official educational establishments of commune 1 (Popular) in Medellín began.

The teams, whose final delivery goal exceeds 200,000, according to the plans of the Medellín Mayor’s Office, they were initially distributed to students in grades 9, 10 and 11.

“They are computers that have the power to transform the life of a child, reduce the gaps and inequalities that today in the world, the largest, are the technological ones. As mayor, my mission is to leave no one behind, which is why this bet is one of the things that excites me the most. We want to transform classrooms. This is going to be the extended day opportunity at the same time”, Mayor Daniel Quintero Calle said.

The Municipal Administration prioritized in this initiative children and young people from the educational institutions Barrio San Nicolás, Fe y Alegría Granizal, Fe y Alegría Popular No. 1, Fe y Alegría Popular Santo Domingo Savio, Federico Carrasquilla, Guadalupe, La Avanzada , La Candelaria, María de los Ángeles Cano Márquez, Nuevo Horizonte – Paulo VI, San Pablo and Antonio Derka – Santo Domingo.

In this last campus, according to the decree signed by the local president, students from 6th to 11th were benefited as delivery pilot in all groups of basic secondary.

The computers that will be delivered this year, whose market cost exceeds two million pesos, in this case were purchased for just over one and a half million and had an investment of more than $80,000 million.

These computers are loaned so that young people can do their academic work. After the school year is over, students return it for maintenance and updating. However, they are returned the following year once they are enrolled.

Esneider Muñoz Carvajal, a student at the Antonio Derka – Santo Domingo institution, was one of the beneficiaries and already has his computer: “I am very happy to receive this computer because I know it will help me acquire knowledge and fulfill my dreams step by step. I study the technical average of Software Development, I am going to take advantage of this tool to learn”.

MEDELLIN

The shots in the college Yampai High School, in Jamundi they were committed with a traumatic weapon and would have originated in differences between the families of two students from the same campus. The latter are suspended, while the authorities and on campus investigate more about what happened.

The deputy commander of the Police Metropolitan of calli, Colonel William Quintero, reported that on Friday (February 4), two families had had a discussion due to differences between two students of the institution.

The Police of the capital of the Valley del Cauca has interference in Jamundí, a municipality in the south of the region, as it is the metropolitan area of ​​Cali.

(Also read: Mother threatened after act of military pardon for ‘false positive’)

“Immediately, the patrol that arrives at the scene requests the intervention of the Police for Children and Adolescents and the Judicial Police and began the collection of evidentiary material at the scene, in order to be able to determine with a security camera and some witnesses, and thus establish effectively what happened and to be able to carry out the corresponding investigations,” said the officer.

He added that “it was possible to determine that a traumatic weapondue to the fact that some pods used by this type of weapon were found”.

(Also: How would the seats for the House of Representatives for the Valley look?)

The colonel noted that an accompaniment route was started to resolve the conflict between these two families and prevent a tragedy from being triggered.

Likewise, there would be a suspect, but the traumatic weapon was not found, when the Police found his whereabouts.

“The national quadrant surveillance model locates the vehicle, registers it, locating a person and not being able to locate the weapon,” said Colonel Quintero.

At school they indicated that they regret the situation, apparently of intolerance, and agreed with Colonel Quintero’s explanation that everything would have been caused by differences between the two families, when the minors argued.

“The meeting was triggered by physical and verbal attacks in which one of those involved in the discussion fired several shots into the air with a blank weapon, without consequences for any of those present who were in the institution at that time,” it is indicated. in a school statement referring to the “embarrassing incident”.

(Also read: Cali: citizens have not collected more than 30,000 cards processed)

“The institution will carry out due process internally, in order to determine the sanction corresponding to the situation of the students involved based on the Liceo’s Coexistence Manual,” the letter reads.

“The parents of the students were informed that their children were immediately suspended until a decision was made in accordance with said behavior, where the corresponding sanction will be communicated to them,” the school statement notes.

On campus they also pointed out that they do not agree with violence, since it is not the way to resolve differences of opinion.

CALI

The governors of four states announced plans Monday to lift statewide mask requirements in schools at the end of February or March, citing the rapid easing of COVID-19’s omicron surge.

The decisions in Connecticut, Delaware, New Jersey and Oregon were announced as state and local governments grapple with which COVID-19 restrictions to jettison and which ones to keep in place. The changes also come amid a growing sense that the virus is never going to go away and Americans need to find a way to coexist with it.

New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy called the move “a huge step back to normalcy for our kids.”

Meanwhile, California announced plans to end its indoor masking requirement for vaccinated people next week, but masks will still be the rule for schoolchildren in the nation’s most populous state.

The four states are among a dozen with mask mandates in schools, according to the nonpartisan National Academy for State Health Policy. New Jersey’s requirement has been in place since classes resumed in person in September 2020.

Murphy cited the “dramatic decline in our COVID numbers” in announcing the rollback. The omicron variant fueled a spike in infections over the holidays, but cases in the state are down 50% and hospitalizations dropped off by one-third since last week, he said.

“We are not — and I’ve said this many times — going to manage COVID to zero,” the governor said. “We have to learn how to live with COVID as we move from a pandemic to an endemic phase of this virus.”

Connecticut Gov. Ned Lamont recommended ending the statewide mandate in schools and child care centers on Feb. 28. New Jersey will roll back the requirement on March 7. Delaware Gov. John Carney said his state’s school mask mandate will run through March.

Oregon’s mask requirements for schools will be lifted March 31. The statewide mask requirement for indoor public places will be lifted no later than the end of March, health officials announced.

Dr. Dean Sidelinger, the state medical officer and epidemiologist, said education and health officials will meet in the coming weeks to revise guidance to “ensure schools can continue operating safely and keep students in class” once the mask rule is lifted.

The March 31 deadline was selected using predictions by health scientists that COVID-19-related hospitalizations will decrease to 400 or fewer by that time — a level that Oregon experienced before the omicron variant surge.

In California, unvaccinated people will still be required to be masked indoors after Feb. 15, and everyone will have to wear masks in higher-risk areas such as public transit and nursing homes and other congregate living facilities, state officials said. Local governments can continue their own indoor masking requirements.

State officials also announced that indoor “mega events” with more than 1,000 people will have to require vaccinations or negative tests, and those who are unvaccinated will be required to wear masks. For outdoor events with more than 10,000 people, there is no vaccination requirement, but masks or negative tests are recommended.

The debate over masks in schools has been polarizing in much of the U.S., with parents protesting at school board meetings and slates of candidates — pro- and anti-mask — seeking school board seats in an attempt to shape policies.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Monday that universal mask-wearing in schools “still remains our recommendation,” but she did not fault states for dropping the requirement.

“It’s always been up to school districts. That’s always been our point of view and always been our policy from here,” she said.

Eight Republican-led states, including Florida and Texas, have bans on school mask mandates, though some have been suspended amid legal fights with districts and parents who want to require masks, according to the National Academy for State Health Policy.

In Illinois, where a judge last week struck down Democratic Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s statewide school mask mandate, the Democratic attorney general said Monday he will appeal the ruling. The Chicago school system, where teachers recently refused to hold in-person classes until an agreement was reached on safety measures, including providing KN95 masks to students and staff, said the ruling doesn’t apply and the nation’s third-largest district will continue to require masks.

Murphy faced pressure from Republicans and some parents who have held rallies at the statehouse demanding an end to the mandate. But the governor has had support for the mask rule from the New Jersey Education Association, the state’s biggest teachers union.

In a statement, the union noted that trends show COVID-19 heading in the right direction, and added: “It is appropriate for Gov. Murphy to allow local districts to continue to require masking in communities where that is prudent based on local conditions.”

Nationwide, new COVID-19 cases per day have plunged by more than a half-million since mid-January, when they hit a record-shattering peak of more than 800,000. Cases have been declining in 47 states over the past two weeks, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.

Also, the number of Americans in the hospital with COVID-19 has fallen 24% since mid-January to about 111,000.

Deaths are still running high at more than 2,400 per day on average, the most since last winter, reflecting a lag between when victims become infected and when they die.

In New Jersey, it is unclear how many and how soon the state’s 600-plus school districts might end the wearing of masks.

In Paterson, the state’s third-biggest city, the school system will take time to consult with administration officials, principals, parents and staff, said district spokesperson Paul Brubaker.

Melissa Alfieri-Collins, a mother of two who disagrees with mask mandates in schools, saying she prefers “choice,” called the governor’s decision good news. But she raised concern that districts might keep mask rules in place.

“For this reason, parents need an opt-out option for when and if districts do this,” she said.

Connecticut will also allow school districts to retain the mandate. It’s unclear if Delaware will follow suit, but the governor said he wanted to give school districts time to consider a local mandate.

Stephen White, a 55-year-old father of a 14-year-old son, said that if the lifting of the mandate were to take effect immediately, he wouldn’t be in favor of it. But four weeks from now is a different story.

“By that time period, if the rates are going down and they can say that ‘OK, kids are vaccinated’ — if they have a substantial amount of kids that are vaccinated — I don’t have a problem with them not wearing a mask at school,” he said.

Francis Amegah, a 63-year-old with two children in the Newark school district, said the end of the mandate is “well overdue.”

“They shouldn’t be wearing masks. If something happens, we’ll be able to handle that. The parents should be able to take care of that,” he said.
Republicans claimed responsibility for pushing the governor to end the mandate.

“Gov. Murphy will never admit that the pressure is getting to him, but it absolutely is,” GOP Senate Leader Steve Oroho said.


The children of the rural area of ​​Ayapel (
Córdoba), in the villages belonging to the corregimiento of Sincelejito, have not attended face-to-face classes in the reactivation for two weeks, because they do not have the way to travel to the Educational Institutions.

There are 300 children
from the villages of El Cuchillo, Barandilla, Los Negritos and Barcelona, ​​who after two years looked forward to being in the classrooms receiving education and now that wish has not been fulfilled.

(Also: Herman Naranjo, kidnapped community leader in Arauca, is murdered)

Luz Nerys Gómez is a leader of the region, president of the Community Action Board of Sincelejito, she raised her voice to denounce what is happening with the children and the fact that they cannot attend classes.

Difficulty getting around

“Two weeks ago classes began, the educators arrived after moving from Ayapel in ‘Johnson’, but the paths are far from the corregimiento and the Children have to get to school by water, because the flood affected us, leaving the channel flooded.”

“The embankments were very deteriorated, the pipes have enough water and the children have to cross them to attend the Institution. They are children from four quite distant villages, who have to get to the corregimiento,” said the social leader.

(You may be interested: Zuluaga made a fool of himself in La Guajira for not knowing how to wear the Wayú hat)

The seriousness of the situation, he says, is that they have no way of transporting themselves from those towns to the head of the corregimiento.

The cost of living multiplies in this region

We are requesting that the Mayor’s Office of Ayapel hire the ‘Johnsons’, deliver canoes, a transport for the children, it’s already been 15 days that the children have missed classes…

“Gasoline is very expensive, each parent has to place a fee on a particular ‘Johnson’ so that he can transport them to Sincelejito and they also have to pay for the service,” he explained.

“We are requesting that the Mayor’s Office of Ayapel hire the ‘Johnsons’, deliver canoes, a transport for the children, because time is advancing very quickly and it is already 15 days that the children have missed classes, after having two years of recess , which means that the same problem continues”, he indicated.

(You may be interested: In Cartagena, 70% of covid patients who died had not been vaccinated)

He explained that they understood the current situation that the municipalities are going through, but that they should not have waited for the day to come and then come in to solve the problem of transportation for the transfer of children to schools.


River transport

Since November we haven’t seen a doctor in this area, we have to go to Ayapel, make an appointment, they do tests and the results are delivered within 8 days…

The mayor of Ayapel, Isidro Vergara, put himself at the forefront of the situation faced by the children, to carry out the contracting procedures to provide a school river transport.

“We already have on the page the contractual process through which we are going to guarantee river school transportation to all children in the low rural area. The theme has been that for this season all our children would be arriving at schools by land, but this is an exceptional case due to the issue of the Cauca River”, he said.

(We invite you to read: Ambulance was transporting a patient with alleged covid but was carrying cocaine)

I point out that the community in the rural areas of the municipality can rest easy, because their arrival at the student centers is guaranteed, not only in Sincelejito, but also in all sectors of Ayapel.


They ask for closure of the rupture in cat face

The children received the first dose in November and have not returned for the second dose. We call on the authorities to send us the vaccines

The social leader also referred to the situation that children face with the placement of vaccines against covid19.

“The children received the first dose in November and they have not returned to apply the second dose. We call on the authorities to coordinate with the Ministry of Health and send us the vaccines, ”she noted.

(Also: Herman Naranjo, kidnapped community leader in Arauca, is murdered)

In the same way, he asked for the permanent presence of doctors in this area of ​​the municipality, because the children are sick with fever, headache and cough.

“Since November we haven’t seen a doctor in this area. We hope they come back, because we have to go to Ayapel, make an appointment, they do the exams and the results are delivered within 8 days. The situation is critical,” he stated.

He asked for the solution to the closing of the break in cat face,
Otherwise, the situation will continue the same in the region, since Ayapel receives head-on the currents of the Cauca River.

Francis Xavier Barrios
Special for WEATHER
sincelejo

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Another active councilor from Cartagena was convicted and sent to jail

38 priests in Villavicencio would be related in cases of pederasty

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