Another way motorists are beating the speed cameras
Traffic authorities seem to be loosing the battle with savvy entrepreneurs looking to cash in on drivers eager to avoid paying fines for speeding.
Traffic authorities seem to be loosing the battle with savvy entrepreneurs looking to cash in on drivers eager to avoid paying fines for speeding.
The Mexican National Seismological Service registered an earthquake measuring 4.4 on the Richter Scale, with the epicenter in Tesistán, Jalisco, at 10.09 a.m. on Tuesday, December 15.
The Federal Telecommunications Institute has confirmed that analog television signals will be shutdown in Jalisco and six other states as of December 16.
The Tonala city government has suspended an ambitious – and heavily criticized – project to build the biggest nativity scene (nacimiento) in the world atop the Cerro de la Reina, the small hill overlooking the Guadalajara crafts suburb that is steeped in history.
Once touted as the region with the “second best climate in the world,” the state of Jalisco faces a much altered future if the warnings of some local scientists are to be accepted.
Guadalajara and Zapopan residents who dump their old analog television sets in the street or public way will face fines of up to 12,000 pesos, municipal officials said this week.
On the eve of the United Nations Climate Change Conference, COP21, set for Paris in early December, Guadalajara civic organizations are calling for a demonstration Sunday, November 29, to build awareness about climate change and its relation to the recent violence in Paris.
The Jalisco Attorney General’s Office (FGE) has released an app that allows citizens to make online denuncias for a number of crimes.
Motorists who had hoped to speed down a stretch of the new 110-kilometer Macrolibramiento (outer Guadalajara beltway) next month will have to wait until next spring.