COMUNICADO 336 1

Puerto Vallarta, Jal. – Puerto Vallarta welcome 150 thousand tourists during this past long weekend, the first long weekend vacation in 2015; generating, according to Oscar Perez, Director of Tourism, an estimated profit of one thousand 425 million pesos.

“This past long weekend, hotels, specially the three stars one, were a little more than 90 % full to capacity. We were visited by 150 thousand tourists. It is important to point out that the quality of service we provide, as well as the kindness of our people is what motivate tourist to return to our city”, expressed Perez.

Perez also added that, three cruisers are expected to arrive this week, bringing a total of seven thousand five hundred passengers.
According to information provided by Port Authorities Each passenger spends about US $ 90.00; therefore, Puerto Vallarta is expecting to make a profit of US $ 675,000.00 a day.

“Even though cruise passengers remain on land only for a couple of hours, they do leave a very significant amount of money in town. We also get the advantage that because of the way they are received and the nice experience they encounter in Vallarta, they might want to return by other means and stay for a longer time”, stated the Tourism authority.

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In the framework of the Meeting of the International Association of Explosives and Investigators Experts, Luis Carlos Najera de Velasco, Director of Public Prosecutions, was named interim President of Region 7 of the Mexican Association Chapter.

Upon receiving his appointment, Najera de Velasco stated: “this Association is fundamental to those responsible for peace and safety in their countries. This kind of organizations trains us to work together and to exchange intelligence information, on how to stop criminals and terrorists from hurting innocent people.

To fight crime in any way, we need the best tools and the best training and guidance. That’s why it is so important to Mexico and to the State of Jalisco to be part of such an important Association”.

Earl Anthony Wayne, US Ambassador to Mexico, acknowledged that the Director of Public Prosecutions, Luis Carlos Najera, received the appointment of Interim Director of the Mexican Chapter of the Association, not by chance, but because of his qualifications; he took a course on Post explosions Effects and Investigation; he is a certified technician in explosives, and understands the effectiveness of collaboration among agencies and the training of police entities. The Ambassador also pointed out that Najera has also been a great allied for the professionalization of Mexico Security Forces.

In relation to the close collaboration among authorities of both countries, Anthony Wayne reminded everyone of the operation that, in collaboration with the US Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives Agency, the Attorney General and the District Attorney, took place in 2014, and that resulted in the confiscation of 2 places where weapons were manufactured, and four people were captured.

The meeting will go on for several days in Puerto Vallarta. The agenda includes training courses and sharing of experiences. Experts from USA, Canada, England, Colombia and Mexico are participating in this important reunion.


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With the purpose of expanding training opportunities, ICATEN, Nayarit’s Institute of Work Training, added a workshop called Herbolaria (Herbal workshop). In this workshop, students will learn to relate with the curative and healing values of some plants and in this way they will learn how take advantage of nature and use its benefits for health care.

This course on Herbal medicine is designed for health professionals or any other person with natural aptitudes or previous studies in the health care field; also for those who know nothing about the topic, but would like to understand the deepness of western herbal medicine.

The basic theory of the therapeutics herbal components; herbal base formulas preparation, prescriptions and doses; curative herbs for many different illness, and how to obtain the right and proven curative formulas, are some of the topics to be studied in this course.

Paulina Sanchez, person in charge of ICATEN, explained that besides learning the properties of many medicinal plants, students will also learn how to plant and cultivate them in case they want to harvest home grown medicinal plants. We will also have them practice to prepare tints, ointments, pills, syrups and other natural products.

Students will also lean to administer and prescribe natural medication to family, relatives and other patients.
 
Classes will be on Saturdays, from 3:00 pm to 7:00 pm. starting February 7.

To register, look us up in Face book ICATEN Nayarit; call (311)211 0697, or send us a Whatsup message at (311) 191 59 35, (311) 107 56 93.  You may also approach us directly at 66 Calle Hidalgo, at Xalisco, Nayarit’s office.

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During the present forest fire season, the Government of Nayarit, through the Nayarit Forest Commission (COFONAY), is taking preventing actions and is providing citizens with some recommendations to avoid and reduce these incidents.

The number of fires increases during the first semester of the year because of cool weather and low water level, together with other factors such as humidity, high temperatures and accumulation of burning materials on the ground. Given the above mention circumstances, COFONOY is carrying out awareness and prevention campaigns around the 20 municipalities.

Miguel Tello Flores, Director of COFONOY recommends not to light bonfires and to always have in mind that forest fires are incidents that cause major danger to people and constitute a contamination problem. For the rural areas he recommends avoiding burning pasture in their lands, and to drivers, not to throw cigarette butts on streets and highways since these can generate a fire.

The Government of Nayarit is doing preventive work to inspire in our citizens, a culture of prevention, conservation and preservation of our natural recourses.


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The housing booming and building constructions is history for Puerto Vallarta; but, however, the Office of Property Registration shows an increase in their income of approximately 10 per cent, during the last few years, when property registration accounts went from 80 to 90 thousand, informed Ricardo Martinez, head of the institution.

The growth, which distinguished Puerto Vallarta for some years, no longer exists; but there are new accounts due to housing developments are being regulated, and to the property deeds that were distributed by the National Agrarian Registry.

Another reason is that people are getting more conscientious about their obligations and report new constructions or any modifications done to their houses in a more spontaneous way. They also come voluntarily to pay their property taxes.

For the last few years, people have been aware of their obligation to pay property taxes because they see how it benefit them; they see their returns in transportation, street lights, patrol cars and many other public services.

Thanks to that awareness, funds collected from property taxes incremented and went from one hundred seventy five million pesos (more than twelve million dollars), to 185 million pesos (close to thirteen million dollars). People see the improvement in their neighborhood and on the roads. It is worth mentioning that the census has not yet been completed. Not everyone has been registered, stated the functionary.

At this moment, he explained, about 60 percent of all those that are registered, fulfill their obligations in time, which indicates that more and more people are becoming aware of their property tax responsibility. January and February are usually the months when more people pay. During those two months, a 15 % discount for “fast pay” is given.

For the month of March the discount is only 5 %. Besides those discounts, there is also a discount for disabled people, widowers and retirees; they get 50 % off their property taxes on the first two millions of the value, but only on the house they live in, and only for one property. People 60-64 years old, also have 50 % off on the first two millions of the value of the in which they reside.

From 75 to 79 years old, they get 50 % off and from 80 years on, the discount on their property taxes is 80 %. Ricardo Rene Rodriguez invited all citizens to approach the installations to fulfill their fiscal duties.

He also said they are trying to make it easy on people, therefore they have open different offices where people pay: downtown at the office of the town presidency, at the administration office, and there is a box at Unirse. People can also go to Las Palmas, Ixtapa, Las Juntas y el Pitillal. Payments can also be made on line through the Internet at www.PuertoVallarta.gob.mx There are plenty of places where payments can be made.

Ricardo Rene Rodriguez stated that some properties are being registered through of the program that was implemented to regulate housing developments. There is also some common land that need to be taken care of, and requires services because people are already leaving there; therefore they need security, garbage collections, etc.; but these people do not pay taxes. They should know and understand that they are not obligated to pay taxes on the land, but they should pay on what they have built on that land. It is very important to mention that even if it is common grounds, if they have built something on it, they are under the obligation to register and pay property taxes on whatever they built.

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Nayarit Governor Comes to The Rescue of a Senior Citizen Couple

Medical attention was given to Silvia and Gabriel, a senior citizen couple. All their debts were also paid for, and a house will be build for them.

One of the priorities of Nayarit Governor, Roberto Sandoval is to help those that have so little and lack so much; reason why he brought justice to 72 years old Silvia Aguirre and her 72 year old husband Gabriel Manjarrez, who, thanks to a neighbor’s report, were found abandoned by their children and living in misery.

Nayarit DIF System, directed by Ana Lilia Lopez de Sandoval, approached the place where these two seniors were found, and they witness the precarious situation in which they were living. Zaira Rivera, program director, stated: “thanks to Nayarit’s Government, we will have a house built for them; today we paid all their debts, we provided them with gas, kitchen utensils; we also supplied them with a stock of food, so that they have enough to cook their own meals. They were also included as beneficiaries of PROSA (food program)”.

After a medical checkup in Nayarit’s Medical Center, they were given Salud Digna (Decent Health Program) vouchers. With those vouchers they will be able to have an electrocardiogram, eyes checkup, blood work to detect hypertension and diabetes; in this way, Silvia and Gabriel will be able, from this day forward, to have a better quality of life.

Deeply moved and with teary eyes, Silvia thanked the Governor for the aid received: “I thank the Governor Roberto Sandoval and his wife for everything they have given us. We use to pray and ask God to have someone come to our rescue. We are happy because they are going to give us a little house where we can enjoy nice warm meals every day”.

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Mexico is in the midst of a human rights crisis. President Enrique Peña Nieto’s government, however, is focusing almost exclusively on its economic and political agenda and leaving human rights aside.

Reports of torture and ill-treatment have increased by 600 percent in the last decade, and enforced disappearances continue to occur widely. In August 2014, the government acknowledged that there are around 22,000 missing persons.

On September 26, a group of students from the Raúl Isidro Burgos Rural Teachers’ College of Ayotzinapa went missing in the city of Iguala after police opened fire on them without warning. Six students were killed in the confrontation, and another 43 were taken into custody and never seen again.

In the search for the missing 43 students, unrelated mass graves have been discovered in the state of Guerrero, and the government’s complicity with organized crime has been in the spotlight.

This is far from an isolated issue. Other gross human rights violations include the murders of 17 peasants in Aguas Blancas (1995), 45 indigenous townspeople in Acteal (1997), 72 immigrants in San Fernando (2010), hundreds of women and girls in Ciudad Juárez (since 1993), and 22 civilians in Tlatlaya (2014).

Outraged by these human rights violations and the country’s 98 percent impunity rate, and mobilized by the mass kidnapping in Iguala, people from diverse groups in all regions of Mexico are raising their voices in protest.

People are demanding justice for the victims and their families, chanting “You took them alive. We want them back alive.” The protests have been mainly pacific, creating an environment of indignation and union against impunity.

The Mexican government has responded to the protests with more human rights violations, trying to inhibit the social protest by threatening to use force.

In November, Mexican authorities placed 11 people in maximum-security prisons for participating in a demonstration. Those 11 protesters were released without charges, but the investigation into whether they were mistreated by police officers (as witnesses have claimed) is still pending.

The message of the government is quite clear: Social protest is not welcome.

States like Puebla, Mexico City, Quintana Roo, and Chiapas have enacted laws that interfere with the right to protest. A new law allowing police to use firearms to break up demonstrations in Puebla resulted in the death of a 13-year-old boy during a protest in July.

Protest is a way of taking action. The big challenge we have is finding a way to transform all of this solidarity and discontent into actions that can make a real difference.

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Puerto Vallarta, Jal. - Given his vast experience in public services and his commitment to Puerto Vallarta, Oscar Ernesto Perez Flores has been named Puerto Vallarta’s Director of Tourism by the town president, Ramon Guerrero Martinez. Perez Flores replaces Carlos Gerard Guzman, who presented his letter of resignation a few days ago.

Perez, born in Puerto Vallarta, has since a very young man, demonstrated to be a responsible and valuable person for services to the community. He has worked in public and private institutions as well as in Educational and Social organizations.
Between October 2012 and June 2014, he was the Town President Private Secretary. Later he became the person in charge of Strategic Projects; position he held until a few days ago.

Starting Friday, Oscar Perez takes over the Directorship of Tourism. He will continue with the town public policies and promotions that, together with the private sector and different government entities, are implemented in order to strengthen all touristic activities.

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004Director of SAEPAL Puerto Vallarta (Puerto Vallarta’s Potable Water, Drainage and Sewer System), Cesar Abarca Gutierrez, accompany by Jalisco Secretary General, Roberto Lopez Lara, made the symbolic donation of 22 new vehicles to make the work of Business, Registration, and Property Registry offices, more efficient.

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When President Barack Obama addressed Mexican students at the National Anthropology Museum in Mexico City in May 2013, he had high hopes for the growth of the Mexican economy. “In fact, I see a Mexico that has lifted millions from poverty,” Obama said. “Because of the sacrifices of generations, a majority of Mexicans now call themselves middle class, with a quality of life that your parents and grandparents could only dream of.”

While this may be true, data gathered by the Center for Economic and Policy Research in a report published in February 2014 indicates that poverty levels are, percentage wise, about the same as in 1994, when the North American Free Trade Agreement between the United States and Mexico took effect. According to this report, this translates to an increase of approximately 14 million people living under the poverty line in 2012 compared to 1994.

While some sources may point to NAFTA as a primary cause for Mexico’s economic decline—with various subsidies and economic policies that made it difficult for Mexican industries to compete—not all of Mexico’s economic decline in the past two decades can be attributed to NAFTA. Mexico has suffered its own crises, including the currency crisis of 1994, when the Mexican peso suffered a quick and dramatic drop in value.

But because Mexico does rely so heavily on the U.S. for its markets, financial downturns such as the housing crisis of 2006-2007 and the recession of 2009 have also hurt the Mexican economy.

Since 2005, government leaders from the U.S., Canada and Mexico have met annually at the North American Leaders Summit to discuss ways to become better partners in the NAFTA agreement.

The most recent summit took place in Toluca, Mexico, on Feb. 19 when Obama and Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper met with Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto to discuss an agenda that included better economic policies, energy reform and regulatory cooperation.

While immigration and the war on drugs remain important issues of concern between Mexico and the U.S., Peña Nieto has emphasized improvements in the economy as a primary means of treating Mexico’s emigration epidemic of the past couple decades.

In his first two years of office, Peña Nieto has opened up the oil and gas industry in Mexico to foreign investment and taken measures to combat monopolies, among other economic policies. He has also taken strides to engage in more foreign trade, and is actively involved in the Trans-Pacific Partnership, an agreement that, if approved, would increase trade options with pacific territories such as Japan and China.

In addition to economic policies, Peña Nieto has also taken some steps toward fighting corruption. While campaigning in early 2014, he established the National Anti-Corruption Commission.

However, the disappearance of 43 students abducted by police during a protest in September 2014 appeared to throw all vows to fight corruption out the window. According to Univision Noticias, it was later discovered that the mayor’s wife who called in the police to disrupt the protest had familial ties to Guerreros Unidos, a local drug trafficking group responsible for killing the students.

Following this mysterious disappearance, Peña Nieto did not give a statement reaching out the families immediately after the incident, and police offered no concrete statement as to what happened to the students. A congressman in a press conference is noted as saying, “Ya me cansé,” which translates to “That’s it. I’m done.” This phrase became a rally cry across social media and in protests.

Finally, in December, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry met with Peña Nieto and agreed to help the Mexican president in establishing a separate police force specifically to fight corruption.

This, however, comes at a time when Peña Nieto’s spending has recently come under fire from the Mexican people.

Jorge Ramos, a renowned Mexican journalist who won the 2014 Burton Benjamin Award for lifetime achievement in journalism, said in his acceptance speech, “There is a huge conflict of interest in Mexico. A government contractor is financing the $7 million home of the president’s wife. That’s not saving Mexico. That’s corruption.”

Mexico’s disdain for Peña Nieto’s response to the disappearance of the 43 students and the construction of the Casa Blanca for his wife led students to demand that Peña Nieto resign in December. Peña Nieto did not resign, instead meeting with John Kerry and, most recently, Obama in Washington—a meeting greeted by a wave of protests in the American capital district.

Have U.S. relations with Mexico improved since Obama and, more specifically, Peña Nieto, took office? One could argue yes, based on new committees, programs and initiatives aimed to ignite the two economies. These events and meetings should be taken with a grain of salt, however.

 

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In the framework of his work tour through Amatitlan de Canas, the Nayarit governor, Roberto Sandoval Castaneda, announced that this year he will start promoting the idea that Amatla de Canas and El Rosario, be considered a Magical Town.

Elaborating some more in the topic, the Governor said: “I want people to know that Nayarit has beautiful places, with a very important historic legacy which we need to let everyone know that it exist so as to promote tourism in these areas; We visited El Rosario, a natural rich colonial town, with great touristic attractions, and I will be the first to promote and drive people into visit Amatlan de Canas. I will make of these communities, Magical Towns”.

At the same, time he mentioned that the quality standard of his people will be the main characteristic for the touristic success in these towns. Both communities meet all the characteristics needed to obtain the title of Magical Towns.

These towns should be let known to the world. If you allowed me to do it, I will be the first one to promote tourism in Amatitlan de Canas. A Magic Town is a reflection of our Country, a reflection of our roots. It reflects what we have become and who now we are. That should make us feel very proud; proclaimed the Governor.

 

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With the visit to 30 communities and an offered of 35 million pesos for road work, health, education, public work, and social programs, the Nayarit governor, Roberto Sandoval Castaneda, completed this past Friday, his three consecutive work trip to Amatlan de Canas.

Upon evaluating the results of this intense work trip, the governor informed that through his journey, initiated in the town of Cerritos and ending in El Pilon, he distibuted thousands of support projects and benefits for woman, field workers, students and senior citizens. People were very pleased with the governor’s visit, since they had not been visited by a government authority for 30 years.

“This was a historic visit; we spent three full days on the road. We visited more than 30 communities of Amatlan de Canas. We listened to the people; attended health and education issues; we solved field issues, handed out machinery, tractors, houses, and roads. We announced new projects for 2015” expressed Roberto Sandoval upon highlighting that during this trip he donated a new urban truck to transfer young students to the different school centers.

Among the most important work that the executive chief announced, we can mention the restoration of the Ahuacatlan-Barranca del Oro road, with an investment of 12 millions five thousand pesos; amount that has already been authorized by the President, Enrique Pena Nieto. Also, for 2015, the Governor will allocate 8 million pesos to pave the road that communicates La Yerbabuena village with Amatlan de Canas. This millionaire investment also includes the reconstruction of the Herradura Bridge, with a cost of one million pesos. The maintenance work of the road from El Rosario to Santa Cruz de Camotlan, with a cost of 5 million pesos, is also included in the budget.

Among many other things, the governor promised to promote tourism in those areas. “We have beautiful places. In Amatlan de Canas we found marvelous towns; a colonial town like El Rosario for example, place to relax and rest. We need to get to know our land, therefore I invite Nayaritas and all the people from Jalisco, Sinaloa and other places, to come and visit Amatlan”; the governor stated.

On his last day on the road, he visited the towns of La Estancia de Los Lopez, Banana de Oro and El Pilon. It was in El Pilon, that the governor gave a summary of what he had done on his three days trip. He highlighted the fact that Amatlan de Cansa needs 35 million pesos only for the year 2015.

He finished his tour by saying that he will continue visiting each Nayarit town, bringing social justice to those who have nothing. This is, so far, the second marathoner visit he has made during his administration.

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