Five years after the unanimous approval of the regulation, the socialists denounce that the Andalusian Government has not yet implemented an effective plan to combat the high temperatures that affect thousands of students and teachers annually.
The PSOE describes the Junta's "Mejora tu centro" program as a "pseudo-plan," deeming it insufficient and detached from the real needs of the educational community. They criticize the Andalusian Executive for focusing on "minor actions and partial solutions" instead of addressing the structural problem of heat in public schools and institutes.
The motion laments that the Junta shifts the administrative and contracting burden of many actions to the educational centers, responsibilities that, according to the PSOE, belong to the regional administration. It is recalled that the Bioclimatization Law includes sustainable measures such as adiabatic cooling systems, cross-ventilation, natural shading, photovoltaic panels, and thermal insulation improvements.
According to the socialists, barely 400 out of over 7,000 Andalusian educational centers have protection measures against the heat. The initiative emphasizes that "every spring and every summer extreme temperatures arrive earlier and with greater intensity," affecting the right to a dignified and safe public education.
The Socialist Municipal Group proposes that Huelva City Council reject the "insufficiency" of the Junta's current climate control plan and demand structural and sustainable actions based on energy efficiency criteria, supported by multi-year funding and a public calendar.
Furthermore, the PSOE will present another motion in defense of equality and social cohesion, rejecting discourses of hate and exclusion. The initiative advocates for a Spain with "social justice, cohesion, and rights," valuing measures such as the minimum wage increase and labor reform, and warning against policies by PP and Vox that "endanger coexistence and equal rights."
It is stressed that access to public resources should be based on "need and rights recognized by the Constitution," rejecting exclusionary discourses towards the migrant population. The motion supports the Spanish Government's decree to regularize the status of migrants and promotes municipal policies for integration.




