04202024Sat
Last updateFri, 19 Apr 2024 2pm

Advertising

rectangle placeholder

Expat suffers fatal fall

Longtime expat resident John Plummer was pronounced dead at the scene on Tuesday, March 17 after taking a fatal tumble on the sidewalk near the entrance of the Super Lake grocery store in San Antonio Tlayacapan. 

Emergency first response medics from the Chapala Red Cross were unable to revive Plummer, who suffered a fatal head wound in the fall.  His body was retrieved by staff from a local funeral parlor after police reviewed video surveillance images showing that death was a result of an accident.


Chapala mayor leads local media on ribbon-cutting junket

The local press was kept on the run over the past week, following in the steps of Chapala Mayor Joaquín Huerta and city hall staff in a frantic agenda of ribbon-cutting events held to inaugurate recently completed government projects.  Public officials in Jalisco and other states where elections will be held this year are banned from divulging propaganda on their accomplishments during the “closed season,” in effect from April 5 until after the polls close on June 7.  Below is a glance at some highlights on the barnstorming adventure.

MARCH 19: Daniel Gutierrez Ramirez, project manager at Semadet (Jalisco’s Environment Ministry), councilwoman Maria Eugenia Real Serrano and Mayor Huerta plant seeds in the new greenhouse installed at Chapala’s municipal nursery. The 160-square meter facility will serve as a center for cultivating endangered native tree species to reforest the Cerro Viejo-Chupinaya-Los Sabinos protected natural area. Semadet shelled out 250,000 pesos to build and equip the greenhouse, while the municipality covered 15,000 pesos of the bill.

MARCH 23: Officials spent a full day making the rounds to cut ribbons on the pre-fabriacted Bibliotecas Virtuales constructed in Ajijic, San Antonio Tlayacapan, Santa Cruz de la Soledad and San Nicolas de Ibarra. The 23-million-peso project funded by the National Council of Science and Technology includes two Chapala branches installed in existing government buildings. Youngsters from San Antonio got a kick out their introduction to the 20 computer terminals that are linked into Mexico’s digital library network.  The local online libraries will open to the public after the Easter holidays. Registered users will have passwords to access the system from their home computers.

MARCH 24: Next up was the debut of the glitzy Centro Comunitario built at the entrance of the public sports unit in Chapala’s downtrodden Plaza de Toros barrio. The 288-square-meter structure comprises four classrooms, a small administrative office and bathrooms for family counseling services and training courses in different self-employment trades, with room to grow on an upper story. The project, initiated last December, cost 2,296,756 pesos, with 322,000 coming from municipal coffers and the remainder covered by federal and state programs. Operations will begin in a few months once money comes in for furnishings.  

MARCH 25:  The mayor and his entourage showed off an extreme makeover at the Municipal Clinic. The improvements included the acquisition of top-to-bottom furnishings for patients, medical staff and administrative personnel and specialized equipment, such as a defibrillator, EKG machine, king-size instrument sterilizer and an incubator for newborns, along with uniforms for doctors and assorted supplies. The upgrade was subsidized through the the federal government’s Ramo 33 program for public health services.

Ajijic dental clinic finally up & running

Nearly three months after a glitzy “grand opening” event with the mother of Governor Aristotoles Sandoval in attendance as guest of honor, the dental clinic at Ajijic’s Centro de Salud is finally running on a regular schedule.

Feds seize Soriana coin–gobblers

Agents of the Federal Attorney General’s Office (PGR) confiscated a dozen coined-operated video game devices during a March 7 raid of the play area located inside Chapala’s Soriana supermarket. Officers said the action was prompted by an anonymous tip. The operation of the so-called tragamonedas (coin-gobblers) is prohibited by law on the premise that playing the gadgets is a highly addictive and wasteful pastime for children. However, the clandestine installation of such machines has become commonplace in scores of lakeside area mom-and-pop stores and thousands more small businesses across the nation as a method of generating extra off-the-books income.