Bellaterra enters decisive phase to secede from Cerdanyola and join Sant Cugat

The administrative process for the territorial independence of the urbanization, which has 3,000 inhabitants, will conclude in the coming months.

Representació visual d'un mapa o d'un límit territorial en debat, sense text ni figures humanes reconeixibles.

Representació visual d'un mapa o d'un límit territorial en debat, sense text ni figures humanes reconeixibles.

The Bellaterra urbanization, home to about 3,000 residents, has entered the final phase of its long process to secede from Cerdanyola del Vallès and integrate into the municipality of Sant Cugat.

The territorial debate in the Vallès region is reignited with the secession file for Bellaterra, a process dating back over three decades and involving extensive legal proceedings. Once the administrative file is closed in the coming months, the Generalitat de Catalunya will have to make the final decision on the locality's future.
Simultaneously, the public healthcare defense platform appeared before the Parliament's Health Commission to demand 100% public ownership of the Ernest Lluch Hospital. The platform's spokesperson, Ignacio Laguna, noted that over 5,000 signatures have already been collected in Cerdanyola supporting this demand.

"We want the Commission to follow up as we request, and we do not want a brick-and-mortar hospital."

Ignacio Laguna · Spokesperson for the public healthcare defense platform
In the cultural sphere, the city of Cerdanyola received the donation of the documentary legacy of the historian and first republican mayor, Jaume Mimó i Llobet, from his family. The cession act, presided over by Mayor Carlos Cordón, ensures the legal custody and public access to this documentation at the Municipal Archive.
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