Staff shuffle at City Hall as interim mayor takes charge
Like a giant human jigsaw puzzle dismantled by political winds and reassembled by deft hands, Chapala’s City Hall staff has undergone a major shakeup over the past week.
The Guadalajara Reporter
Guadalajara's Largest English Newspaper
Like a giant human jigsaw puzzle dismantled by political winds and reassembled by deft hands, Chapala’s City Hall staff has undergone a major shakeup over the past week.
The latest local place to get tested for Covid-19 opened its doors last week when a mini-laboratory popped up in the northwest corner of the Soriana supermarket parking lot in Chapala.
After new sets of traffic lights were installed this week, the renovations of the nodo vial (traffic knot) connecting the south end of the Libramiento bypass and the Chapala-Jocotepec highway have been completed in time for an inauguration ceremony set for Friday, March 5, 7 p.m., just an hour before Mayor Moisés Anaya steps down for an election season leave of absence.
A huge cargo truck apparently lost brake power while traveling south along Avenida Madero around 4 p.m. Thursday, March 11.
The Chapala government is on board to help the local restaurant sector reactivate business in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic, offering fiscal incentives to affiliates of Restauranteros Unidos y Asociados de la Ribera de Chapala (RUA).
Chapala’s Ecology Department has issued a regrettable death sentence for the emblematic tree that has shaded the atrium of the village church in Cruz de la Soledad for almost 100 years.
The Easter holiday period is invariably a peak tourism and travel season in Mexico, with the Lake Chapala region ranking as a hotspot for vacationers coming from the Guadalajara metropolitan area and other areas of the country.
Chapala Mayor Moisés Anaya Aguilar has acknowledged he is preparing to take a temporary leave of absence to seek reelection for a second three-year term under the Movimiento Ciudadano banner.
A new initiative to enhance protection and conservation of the local environment was approved at the February 24 session of Chapala’s Consejo de Ecología (Ecology Council), a body that includes community leaders and local government officials.