Costa Blanca
Eleven tourist apartments in Santa Pola and four in Elche are removed from the tourism registry

The Valencian Community of Tourist Use residences (VUT) Tourism Registry is being updated by the Generalitat, which means that residences that have not submitted the necessary paperwork to stay in the registry will be removed from the census. Only four properties will be removed from the census, despite the fact that 803 will be deregistered throughout the province of Alicante. This is because the municipality of Elche is wagering more and more on the tourism industry. Eleven are in the Santa Pola case.
They have been found in the Marismas urbanisation, Playa ParaÃso II, ParaÃso I, and Gran Alacant, as well as in other already remote streets. In this way, the fishing village experiences exponential growth in the summer due to the influx of tourists from the rest of the country or second homes in the area, primarily from Elche.
When it comes to Elche, there are four residences in the hamlets, which are also the locations that see the most tourists during the busiest times of the year. Two in Arenales del Sol and two in L’Altet in this instance. The first apartment is located on Valladolid Street in the Infinity View residential area, while the second is located on Algeciras Street in the Ocean View Phase 1 development. L’Altet has two locations: one on a remote piece of rural property and the other on Vereda del Sur Street in the Los Limoneros development.
Only 200 of the 950 tourist apartments in Elche are now occupied.
Lastly, the outlying districts of Elche are where the majority of these tourist apartments are located. There are 950 VUT registered in the city, the City Council said, in reference to the housing issue that has been the focus of considerable discussion in recent months. According to this viewpoint, Elche is not a tourist destination that poses a problem and these serve to enhance the local hotel offerings. Only 200 of the 950 tourist units that have been registered are currently in use. Of these, 116 are in the city, 86 are in La Marina, 15 are in El Altet, 12 are in Jubalcoi, 671 are in Arenales, and the remainder are in other distant regions. However, the City Council last year approved the first building permission in the city for a particular tourist housing complex consisting of fourteen flats on Calle Beethoven.
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Constitutional Court condemns Torrevieja Council for harassing a police officer

After reporting irregularities that had occurred “systematically” within the force, a former Torrevieja Local Police officer was subjected to “constant harassment” from his superiors. The First Chamber of the Constitutional Court has upheld the award of nearly €100,000. The ruling, which was published in the BoletÃn Oficial del Estado (Official State Gazette)BOE)) on Friday, deems the “harassing conduct” experienced by officer Antonio RB, a career civil servant who held the status of protected victim of the Valencian Anti-Fraud Agency, to be “judicially proven.” It also emphasises that the Torrevieja City Council “actively participated, institutionally and within its scope of powers, in some of the harassment acts that have been judicially proven.”
The police officer’s claim for financial liability for workplace harassment was upheld by the Elche Administrative Litigation Court No. 1 in 2018. The initial judgement was overturned by the Second Section of the High Court of Justice of the Valencian Community (TSJ-CV) after an appeal, which ruled out the existence of workplace harassment. The officer’s appeal against the TSJ-CV ruling was subsequently dismissed by the Administrative Litigation Division of the Supreme Court. The Constitutional Court ultimately upheld the initial judgement, declaring it final, after the officer filed an appeal for constitutional protection.
The officer’s ordeal commenced in 2010, when the Torrevieja Local Police, which had been recently appointed under the Popular Party mayor Pedro Hernández Mateo, issued a warning regarding the lack of control over the cash collected in fines and the “systematic” inspections of specific entertainment venues. This was in contrast to the inaction in other establishments, despite unfavourable reports.
The incident was reported by him and two other police officers three years later, and an inspector and two officers were subsequently investigated. The complaint resulted in harassment, including the following: the removal of his weapon and documents from his gun rack and locker, the alteration of his schedules without prior notification and the assignment of new ones without the required rest period, and the denial of vacation time.
Manuel Antonio LV, one of the police commanders who co-defended the city council, published a “pamphlet” in which he referred to the officer as a “cephalopod” and a “slimy, disgusting animal” and disclosed private information on a notice board that was “visible to all personnel.” In the interim, the Alicante Traffic Department received a letter from the co-defendant Torrevieja Local Police Chief, Vicente GS, in which he suggested that the officer may have misplaced his driving licence.
He encountered a “rare atmosphere towards him” at his new post, the Alguazas Town Hall in the Region of Murcia, in 2016. He discovered that his medical records had been sent from Torrevieja and “reported as problematic” after consulting with a colleague. ” Subsequently, he was relocated to Lorca, “where he is at ease.”
Vicente GS and Manuel Antonio LV, the latter has now retired, were previously deemed to be “instigators of workplace harassment” in two “very similar” proceedings. As a result, the Vega Baja council was required to provide compensation to two other officers in the amount of 71,950 euros.
The Torrevieja City Council was aware of, permitted, and condoned the “true and certain” workplace and psychological harassment that the inspector and the superintendent of the Local Police endured for several years. The ruling asserts that both officers were “instigators of other harassment” of Local Police officers on multiple occasions.
The trial judge underscored that the officer’s account was not refuted by any witnesses or expert reports provided by Torrevieja City Council. Conversely, the victim’s testimony concerning the infringement of her moral integrity, personal dignity, and fundamental rights was “conclusive.”
The “hostile environment” and “psychological violence”
The Constitutional Court maintains the initial ruling and emphasises that “the concept of workplace harassment can encompass situations or behaviours of various kinds, whether specific or repeated over time, but they all have in common (…) the degrading nature of working conditions or the hostility they entail, and which have the purpose or result of attacking or endangering the employee’s personal integrity.”
The court determines that the alleged constitutional violation is “clearly indicative,” indicating a “reasonable suspicion” that the police officer’s treatment was workplace harassment that “significantly harmed his physical and moral integrity.”
“He was deliberately and repeatedly humiliated with the intention of violating his dignity, resulting in a hostile and psychologically violent environment that not only prompted him to demand a change of workplace but was also exacerbated by the city council’s repeated refusal to grant him this, ultimately having a significant impact on his physical and mental health,” the ruling states.
The Constitutional Court also gives “special emphasis” to the fact that the Torrevieja City Council “not only consciously remained indifferent to the hostile conduct” towards the police officer, in a “repeatedly passive position” maintained “for years,” but also “actively participated, institutionally and within its scope of powers, in some of the acts of harassment that appear to have been judicially proven.”
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Aurigny will operate flights between Alicante and Guernsey this summer

Aurigny has announced the inclusion of a seasonal route between Guernsey and Alicante in its summer schedule. It will be the sole direct flight between the Spanish metropolis and the Channel Islands.
The schedule comprises weekly flights from July 5th to August 9th, which are operated by ATR 72-600 aircraft. A total of 432 seats are available during this time.
Flight GR 800 Guernsey 08:10 – 12:20 Alicante on Saturdays.
Flight GR 801 Alicante 13:20 – 14:55 Guernsey on Saturdays.
Alicante, Porto, Nice, and Bastia comprise the organisation’s new summer routes.
In comparison to previous years, when Aurigny operated flights to Alicante, Malaga, Menorca, Palma de Mallorca, and Valencia, its presence in Spain in 2025 will be smaller, despite this expansion.
The route to Alicante is also distinguished by its length, as it is the longest route in Europe and one of the longest in the globe for the ATR 72, with an estimated duration of 3 hours and 10 minutes and a distance of 1,250 kilometres, according to the Cirium platform.
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15-year-old boy caught driving three times the speed limit

Local police in the Alicante municipality of San Vicente del Raspeig have located and identified a 15-year-old boy who boasted in a video uploaded to the social media platform TikTok about driving at 120 kilometres per hour.
The video, which was captured at 1:30 p.m. on February 19th on Calle RÃo Turis in San Vicente, seess him driving a car at a speed that was three times the maximum speed limit of 40 km/h. Additionally, he is accompanied by other juveniles inside the vehicle.
The young man is facing charges for a variety of potential road safety violations, such as irresponsible driving, driving without a licence and speeding.
According to a police report that has been submitted to the Juvenile Prosecutor’s Office in Alicante, the car in which the minors were travelling is owned by the driver’s father. The report identifies all occupants.
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