‘Green’ tax plan gets little love
A proposal to introduce a new tax for car owners in Jalisco that could raise as much as a quarter of a billion dollars annually has been greeted with scant enthusiasm by many politicians and academics.
A proposal to introduce a new tax for car owners in Jalisco that could raise as much as a quarter of a billion dollars annually has been greeted with scant enthusiasm by many politicians and academics.
Guadalajara’s Martín Vaca has been converting autos into amazing limousines for the past three decades. The Reporter first wrote about him 23 years ago when he turned a small plane into a limousine.
Jorge Vergara, the owner of the Guadalajara Chivas, Mexico’s most popular soccer team, has ended a 22-year relationship with the nation’s largest broadcaster and announced that he will be creating his own television channel to show his team’s live games and offer other club-related content.
The world’s best judokas will be in Guadalajara this weekend as the city hosts the 26th World Judo Masters, sponsored by the International Judo Federation, from Friday, May 27 through Sunday, May 29 at the Polideportivo Lopez Mateos complex.
More than 100 moms staged a sit-in at the plush Galerias mall in Guadalajara to protest the discrimination mothers frequently suffer when they breastfeed their babies in public.
Guadalajara business leaders have expressed serious reservations about a proposal to convert Avenida Alcalde/16 de Septiembre into a pedestrian-only walkway.
Gay rights activists in Guadalajara participate in an after-dark, silent march on International Day Against Homophobia (Tuesday) to remember those who have been murdered in hate crimes committed against the LGBT community in Mexico. Earlier in the day, a small protest was held outside the Jalisco Congress to draw attention to the absence of legislation regarding hate crimes.
Metro-area Guadalajara and Colima have joined the list of cities in the Rockefeller Foundation’s 100 Resilient Cities (100RC) program that is dedicated to helping urban centers around the world become more resilient to the physical, social and economic challenges that are a growing part of the 21st century.
A state legislator from the Citizen’s Movement has submitted a proposal that would effectively prohibit gated communities (cotos) in Jalisco, and open up many of their streets and avenues to general traffic.