The Council, in an official statement, assured that the nursery service will continue to operate normally and that necessary measures will be taken to ensure its continuity and provide stability to the user families. The ruling by the Provincial Court upholds the eviction, deeming the property owner's title to the land where the children's center is located as proven.
Despite the dispute with the businessman, the Council stated there is "absolutely no problem" with him and framed the legal actions within municipal technical and legal criteria. The decision to appeal, explained the governing group, follows the recommendations of the municipal legal services to exhaust judicial avenues, defend public interests, and explore all available legal options.
The Council emphasized that the judicial process has not yet concluded and that there is a possibility for the matter to be decided by the Supreme Court. In parallel, the Department of Nurseries and Children's Centers has initiated the enrollment process for the 2026-2027 school year, signaling continuity and normalcy to the families using the service.
The conflict stems from the occupation of the plot located on Avenida Happag Lloyd, in the Cañada del Río urbanization, where the children's center is situated. A court had already ruled in 2024 that the Council occupied the land without a legitimate title, ordering its vacating, a decision later confirmed by the Provincial Court of Las Palmas, creating uncertainty about the service's continuity.
Following the judicial resolution, the Popular Party of Pájara criticized the municipal management and requested explanations from the governing group regarding measures to prevent interruptions in family services. The popular spokesperson, Miryam de León, suggested that the Council should have previously sought a negotiated solution with the landowner and demanded full transparency to clarify the sentence's consequences and the nursery's future.




