Tuesday, May 7, 2024

Family that lost their home to massive Puebla sinkhole gets a new house

A family whose home was swallowed by a sinkhole that appeared on their Puebla property last year now has a new house.

The Puebla government spent just under 870,000 pesos (US $43,750) to build a new house for the Sánchez Xalamihua family in Juan C. Bonilla, the same municipality where the sinkhole appeared and grew to almost 130 meters in diameter.

The family received the keys to their new 120-square-meter home on Monday, which was coincidentally the eldest daughter’s 14th birthday.

The Puebla Welfare Ministry announced on Twitter that it handed the house over to the family on the instructions of Governor Miguel Barbosa. The family now has an asset for their children, it said.

The municipality covered the family’s rent while they were waiting for the new home to be built.

The residence is just over half the size of the family’s previous house, which they built themselves. It is not yet connected to the sewage system and lacks access to other public services, but the family nevertheless said that were happy with their new abode.

“The truth is I’m very happy [to be here] with my children,” Magdalena Xalamihua told Imagen Televisión.

“Now we have to work to furnish it,” said Heriberto Sanchez, her husband.

Jonathan Sánchez, the couple’s son, recalled feeling sad when his family lost its home to the sinkhole, which appeared almost a year ago. He said his father had no money at the time and the family didn’t know where they would live.

The sinkhole devoured most of the family’s home about two weeks after it appeared. Two dogs fell into it before that but were subsequently rescued.

One study blamed a massive exploitation of water for the appearance of the sinkhole, but an earlier study by the National Water Commission decided that the most likely cause was the dissolution of calcareous rocks, such as limestone or dolostone.

With reports from El Universal and Excélsior

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
People on top of a freight train

Thousands of migrants spent nearly a week stranded in Zacatecas

0
The migrants faced grueling conditions when the freight trains they were riding stopped in Zacatecas and temperatures soared above 30 C.
Residents shared photos of the Velo de Novia fire near Valle de Bravo burning late Sunday night.

Valle de Bravo wildfire now 60% contained, AMLO says

0
The president said that the local population is not at risk, though some residents and tourists have been moved to safe zones.
Australian brothers Callum and Jake Robinson and American Jack Carter Rhoad were killed while on a surfing and camping trip in Baja California last week

Missing tourists’ bodies identified in Ensenada; surfers pay tribute and demand safety

3
Three people were arrested in connection with the murders of Australian brothers Callum and Jake Robinson and U.S. citizen Jack Carter Rhoad.