Costa Blanca
Dénia’s 20 kilometres of beaches will offer more amenities

Along its roughly 20 km of coastline, Dénia City Council wants to offer a full range of services on the beaches. The contract to add six new rental stations for hammocks, shade, pedal boats, canoes, kayaks, and paddleboards has just gone out to bid. Furthermore, a second contract that was just put out to bid by the council also calls for installing bathrooms on the beaches, with more to be added this season.
As stated by Councillor for Beaches Pepe Doménech, the goal of the beach services tender is to cover the areas of the coast that were left without beach services (shade, water sports, and hammocks) last summer because the city council’s subsequent tender was either abandoned or the companies that applied failed to meet the minimum score.
Since most of the beach service jobs that the Dénia City Council put out in 2024 were not awarded, interested businesses are now able to submit bids for them. In particular, the following:
Playa de les Deveses
Shade stand and hammock. situated close to Calle Riu Grande (Restaurante Almar).
Playa de les Bovetes
shade stand and hammock. In the vicinity of l’Assagador del Palmar.
CAP stand, paddleboarding, canoeing/kayaking, and roller skating. In the vicinity of Pasarell Street.
Playa de les Marines
shade stand and hammock. Located on Calle Esparver Street
shade stand and hammock. Located atop Sant Pere’s Assagador.
a swimming pool, paddleboarding, canoes and kayaks, and pedal boats. Located on Calle Boga
Only three beach service lots were awarded in the previous year’s tender, which also included the beach bars: the aquatic platform at Punta del Raset, the Raset paddle and kayak stand, and the hammock stand in front of the Los Ángeles Hotel.
The new tender is expected to cost 58,500 euros in total this summer.
Additional toilets
On the other hand, the council has put out a second contract for the installation of beachside restrooms. The service will be provided between June 1st and October 12th under this contract, which is valued €34,000—12 more days than the previous year.
Two additional toilets have also been added, one in Les Deveses and another near the end of Calle Les Rotes, which is adjacent to Playa Les Arenetes.
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Costa Blanca
Clocks go forward one hour in the early hours of Saturday/Sunday

The time change will occur this weekend, which is the final weekend of March. In particular, we will need to advance our clocks by one hour in the early hours of Saturday and Sunday, so that at two in the morning, it will be become three.
Data from the Institute for Energy Diversification and Savings shows that electricity consumption only decreases by 5% during daylight saving time, despite the fact that the measure was designed to save energy and electricity by maximising daylight hours.
In any event, this is a modification that occasionally causes confusion even though it is generally accepted by the public. Without a doubt, in this instance, the clocks need to be advanced by one hour, making 2:00 a.m. become 3:00 a.m.
It’s true that the time change has been losing popularity in recent years, regardless of personal preferences. There is growing support from corporations, public agencies, and residents to eliminate the adjustment and establish a clear date. Even the European Union is now involved in this discussion. In 2019, the community body proposed to do away with the time change in a directive. However, the final decision has been forced to be put off indefinitely due to the 27 member states’ lack of unanimity and the unstable international environment.
Spain will keep the time adjustments in place for at least the upcoming year; the dates for the modifications until 2026 were published in the Official State Gazette in 2022. We won’t know until then if our nation will stick to the alternating time or, conversely, establish a firm schedule.
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Costa Blanca
Scooter hit by a tram in Sant Vicent

In Sant Vicent (Alicante), a 32-year-old man was hurt on Friday afternoon, 28th March, when he was struck by a tram while he was riding a scooter.
The individual was treated for several injuries by the medical staff of a BLS and a SAMU (Emergency Medical Service) unit that were sent to the scene. The Emergency Information and Coordination Centre (CICU) reports that BLS then transported him to Dr. Balmis General Hospital.
The mishap caused the Alicante-Luceros tram to be stopped at 5:23 p.m. while it was passing through Universitat between Universitat and Santa Isabel. The train was then resumed at 6:11 p.m.
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Costa Blanca
20,000€ for bullied child in Catral

The Ministry of Education was ordered by the High Court of Justice of the Valencian Community (TSJCV) to compensate the family of a youngster who acknowledged being bullied at the Catral Secondary School from 2020 to 2021 with €20,000.
According to the resolution, when the family of the student, who was 14 at the time, reported the school violence, the school denied that it was happening and even deemed the victim’s absences from class to be unwarranted, indicating that the management team of the school failed to implement procedures to address the incident.
Additionally, he used the COVID pandemic as an excuse for suspending the three students who had confessed to bullying when he eventually activated them to impose sanctions.
Only when psychological studies verified the effect the incidents had on the victim’s mental health did the educational authorities cease their inaction.
Threats, shoving, and insults through WhatsApp
According to the Administrative Litigation Chamber’s Section 4 order, the child has been the victim of “constant” bullying by three Catral Secondary School classmates since the start of the 2019–2020 academic year. They frequently spat slurs at the youngster, including “Chinese, Asian, fat, pig…” and instances where they assaulted her, stole her school supplies and concealed them, or chalk-stained her clothes. They once dumped her rucksack, which contained all of her books, into a puddle of water. She was frequently abused on social media and threatened via WhatsApp after school.
A pattern of harassment
When the student’s family, led by lawyer Pablo Pérez Sola, discovered their daughter was being tormented in December 2019, just before the Christmas holidays, they reported the incident right away to the school, which promised to talk to the perpetrators.
Because they “did not observe a pattern of bullying behaviour towards the student,” the school’s management team insisted that no protocol be created for this circumstance, keeping the bullies in the victim’s classroom for the rest of that school year. According to the instructors, “no cases of bullying were observed when the parties were questioned, and due to the fact that once mediation was conducted, the situation ceased to exist—in their assessment.”
Students who were impacted were warned that “any sign, however small, of animosity would be severely punished and would involve the opening of a case to prevent situations of school violence and the corresponding sanctions.” The school’s administration and teaching staff also promised that “an intensive observation process was carried out by the guidance department.”
Report
The Ministry of Health’s Child and Adolescent Mental Health Unit (USMIA) confirmed in a report that the affected individual had “anxiety-type symptoms secondary to bullying from the previous year” in October 2020, when the school year had begun with restrictions because of the pandemic. In response, the IES committed to creating a program for the minor’s gradual reintegration into the centre, where it had already acknowledged the bullying that it had denied.
The reintegration program was used to justify the student’s absences, as they had not been consistently attended since the start of the school year. But “after a period of time,” the IES concluded that they were unjustified, citing the Education Inspectorate’s and Social Services’ directives as justification.
In-home educational support
The minor’s parents sent the school with additional paperwork in September 2021, including a second USMIA assessment that suggested the student get home-based educational treatment. The procedure for requesting this kind of help started, and the Generalitat (Catalan Government) finally approved the request.
The court’s decision to support the appellant family is actually based on this ruling: the centre thought that the protocols weren’t necessary to start, but nearly two academic years later, it activated this home care measure, thus it feels that the earlier protocols were required.
Psychiatric report
A 2022 psychiatric report that is part of the case file states that the youngster has mental diseases that are consistent with the diagnoses of “post-traumatic stress disorder” and “conversion disorder,” which have “a direct and causal relationship between the expert diagnoses and the bullying.”
According to the same report, “it would be highly advisable to proceed with intensive psychiatric and psychological treatment, for a period of time that, at this time, we cannot specify.” These psychological injuries are described as having “an irregular and persistent evolution that has barely improved with the prescribed treatments” and “producing a notable alteration in his capacity to lead an independent life.”
Appreciation
The Ministry of Education claims that because the lockdown brought on by the COVID outbreak began, the disciplinary actions and reprimands against the participants were halted, “so they were never filed.” Given that the family’s appeal had been submitted to the Legal Advisory Council prior to the proceedings reaching the TSJCV (High Court of Justice), the Ministry of Education itself accepted this.
This process included the Generalitat taking responsibility for 5,000 euros in 2023 for not pursuing disciplinary action against juveniles who “had admitted responsibility for certain acts.”
Abandonment
The decision is “a public denunciation” of the negligence that “the administration often displays in these cases” when bullying takes place in educational institutions, according to attorney Pablo Pérez of the Pardo y Pérez Abogados company. In the absence of a response from the administration, which dismissed the case due to the statute of limitations, the family filed a criminal complaint with the Juvenile Prosecutor’s Office, seeking €56,000 in compensation in its appeal.
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