Thursday, May 2, 2024

Santa Lucía airport ruling also orders abandoned project be left intact

A federal court yesterday issued a new provisional suspension order against the new Santa Lucía airport that also instructs federal authorities not to make any changes to the site of the abandoned Mexico City airport project.

The court order came in response to injunction requests filed by the #NoMásDerroches (No More Waste) collective, made up of civil society organizations, law firms and more than 100 citizens.

The Mexico City-based administrative court ordered construction at the Santa Lucía project to stop until the federal government proves that it has all necessary air safety permits.

The government has already been served with federal court orders instructing it to cease construction until it proves that it has all necessary environmental permits to build the US $4.1-billion airport.

The directive to leave the abandoned Texcoco airport intact came just one day after the project chief of an ecological park planned for the site said the foundations of the X-shaped terminal and part of a runway will be left under water as the result of the restoration of a drained lake.

The #NoMásDerroches collective has filed 147 separate injunction requests that could hold up or threaten construction of the new airport at the Santa Lucía Air Force Base in México state.

The collective’s goal is a review of the legality of the cancelation of the new Mexico City International Airport and to ensure that the Santa Lucía project has all the necessary permits.

After the group had its first legal victory earlier this month, President López Obrador said the government will respect the decision of the judge.

Communications and Transportation Secretary Javier Jiménez Espriú said that work at the airport can’t stop because it hasn’t even started.

He also said the government “completely agrees” that construction cannot begin until the relevant permits have been issued.

Source: El Universal (sp) 

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
City of Tehuacan, Puebla by night.

Did this Puebla city make history with its fireworks ban? Not so fast

0
Tehuacán, Puebla, didn't make history with its city fireworks ban, but the court ruling to uphold the ban did. Find out how.
hazy Mexico City skyline with view of the Independence Angel

CDMX poor air quality alert remains in effect for second day

0
Mexico City residents face driving restrictions and warnings to avoid the outdoors, as air quality was expected to deteriorate throughout Wednesday.
Mexico's scurity minister Rosa Icela Rodriguez speaking at a podium

Federal authorities protest as El Mencho’s brother released from prison

0
Judge Rogelio Díaz Villarreal concluded that authorities lied about Abraham Oseguera's arrest process and ordered him immediately set free.