Germán Casagua secures over $8 billion historic investment for Neiva housing

Neiva's mayor, Germán Casagua, secured an investment exceeding $8 billion for housing improvements for 180 families in communes 2, 8, and 10. The funds come from the national government's Convocatoria 004 of 2025, where Neiva received the most resources among 100 competing cities. Interventions will target floors, roofs, and sanitary spaces.

In a symbolic ceremony, Mayor Germán Casagua handed documents to community leaders, signaling the start of housing upgrades. The effort, led by Housing and Habitat Secretary Marvin Victoria, involved house-by-house diagnostics and rigorous project formulation to meet ministry standards.

"Neiva secured the most resources among cities, with 180 improvements," Victoria stated. Out of 100 cities in the call, only 53 were approved, underscoring the competitive process. Each home will receive up to $21,352,500, focusing on critical conditions.

The mayor reaffirmed his pledge: "Today Neiva is the municipality that received the most housing improvement subsidies." Leaders like Esper González Vargas from commune 2 and Luz Dary Parra Rojas from commune 10 praised collaboration with Community Action Boards and community oversight.

Senator Pedro Hernando Flórez Porras sent a message backing the joint initiative. Works will begin in June and extend to October, lasting two to three weeks per intervention. This achievement adds to 459 improvements managed from 2024 to 2026.

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Housing Minister Iván Poduje announces reversal of Colonia Dignidad expropriation at press conference, highlighting budget priorities amid human rights controversy.
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Housing minister Poduje announces reversal of Colonia Dignidad expropriation

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Housing Minister Iván Poduje announced the government will reverse the Colonia Dignidad expropriation decree due to budget constraints. The move aims to prioritize housing and reconstruction funds but has drawn opposition criticism for overlooking memory and human rights commitments. PS and Frente Amplio lawmakers call for dialogue with President José Antonio Kast.

Chile's Housing Minister Iván Poduje announced in the Senate plans to intervene in 50 critical neighborhoods this year, part of a broader effort targeting 152 areas hit by narcotrafficking and housing decay. The program starts at Cerro Chuño in Arica, site of Tren de Aragua presence, involving demolition of irreparable homes. He also pledged to tackle operators charging abusive fees for housing subsidies.

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Opposition councilor Héctor Javier Osorio Botello condemned Neiva mayor German Casagua's political involvement after risk management leader Nancy Trujillo denounced persecution for not supporting candidate Rodrigo Amaya Culma in legislative elections. Osorio warns of a city crisis worsened by political retaliation and underfunding of promised works. He calls for urgent adjustments to the Municipal Development Plan.

Madrid mayor José Luis Martínez-Almeida has presented a project to transform the AZCA financial hub in Tetuán district with a large central park, over 1,000 trees, and a waterway. The works, costing 89.3 million euros with public-private funding, will start in the first half of 2027.

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The indigenous community of Paniquita in Rivera municipality, Huila, is building a 100-meter road slab with 30 SENA apprentices. The initiative merges technical training and community work to address a long-standing infrastructure need. Women are actively involved in traditionally male tasks.

The trial over alleged corruption in Neiva's 2020 School Feeding Program (PAE) contracting moves forward with a new judicial timeline, led by Judge Olga María Erazo. Former mayor Gorky Muñoz Calderón, now a Senate candidate, faces charges alongside ex-officials and contractors. The preparatory hearing aims to wrap up evidence discovery to start the oral trial in March.

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Colombia's Ministry of Housing, City and Territory has published a draft decree setting the sale of Social Interest Housing (VIS) and Priority Interest Housing (VIP) in Colombian pesos, rather than minimum wages. The document establishes caps of 135 minimum wages for VIS and 90 for VIP, with a limit of 280 minimum wages in San Andrés, Providencia, and Santa Catalina for rural social interest housing.

 

 

 

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