Hirukide to Host Information Session for Large Families in Aretxabaleta

The Federation of Large Families of Euskadi, Hirukide, will hold an information session at Aretxabaleta's health center to detail available aid and rights.

Generic image of a meeting room, representing an information session.
IA

Generic image of a meeting room, representing an information session.

The Federation of Large Families of Euskadi, Hirukide, will hold an information session next Tuesday in Aretxabaleta, aiming to introduce the entity, detail existing aid, and gather the needs of the collective.

The meeting will take place in the meeting room of the health center in Aretxabaleta, from 9:30 AM to 5:00 PM. During the session, the federation will offer personalized attention to all interested families from the municipality and its surroundings. Although not mandatory, those who wish can request an appointment in advance to avoid waiting times and receive preferential attention.
Information will be provided on the organization's services and activities, as well as on the rights, aid, and public benefits currently in force in Euskadi for large families. Additionally, questions, suggestions, and potential claims raised by attendees will be addressed.
As explained by Hirukide, key topics to be discussed include rights associated with being a large family, available aid and permits, updates on support for raising and maintaining children, and the preliminary draft of the new Family Law. Details on local aid and discounts in Aretxabaleta will also be offered, and contributions from the families themselves will be collected.
Furthermore, some of the most relevant innovations approved in recent years, which, according to the federation, "are still unknown to many families," will be outlined. These include the electric and thermal social bonus, the expansion of aid for childcare and maintenance, and the extension of large family status.

Are still unknown to many families.

Founded in 1999, Hirukide is a non-profit organization declared of public utility by the Basque Government in 2003. Its work focuses on defending the rights of large families in all areas of political, institutional, social, media, and business life. It currently brings together over 8,200 families in Euskadi, representing approximately a quarter of those with an official title in force in the autonomous community.