Tag Archives: Alejandro Garcia Padilla

Puerto Rico debates legalizing marijuana use

Dozens of people are marching through Puerto Rico‘s capital in support of a recent bill filed by a former police chief that aims to legalize marijuana for personal use, unleashing an unprecedented debate in this conservative U.S. territory.

The crowd marched Saturday to the seaside Capitol building, where Sen. Miguel Pereira filed a bill this week stating it should be legal for those 21 and older to possess up to one ounce of marijuana. The actions of Pereira, who’s also a former federal prosecutor, have polarized the island.

Currently, those charged with marijuana possession can face up to three years in jail and a $5,000 fine.

Gov. Alejandro Garcia Padilla said he supports an open debate on the issue, adding it’s not a priority for his administration.

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/4DwHRcjlgvA/

Puerto Rico protects premier turtle nesting site

Puerto Rico‘s governor has signed legislation to protect a swath of land along the island’s northeast coast that serves as a top U.S. nesting site for the world’s largest turtle.

The law ends a 15-year fight that activists and celebrities including actor Benicio Del Toro waged against developers eager to build hotels, golf courses and luxury homes in an area fringed by palm trees and turquoise waters.

The area is called the Northeast Ecological Corridor and covers more than 1,200 hectares (2,900 acres) of lush vegetation and pristine beaches that are a nesting site for the federally endangered leatherback turtle. It is also the site of a popular bioluminescent bay, featuring microorganisms that glow in the dark when agitated.

Gov. Alejandro Garcia Padilla signed the bill on Saturday.

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/JGLOPyXO8_M/

Puerto Rico to overhaul public pension system

Senators in Puerto Rico have approved a bill to overhaul the island’s crumbling pension system as hundreds of irate public employees protested outside the seaside Capitol building.

The House of Representatives was expected to approve the bill late Thursday, and Gov. Alejandro Garcia Padilla was expected to sign it as well.

The bill calls for a higher retirement age, a nearly 2 percent increase in worker contributions and reduced benefits and monthly pensions for certain employees. It also would transfer the bulk of employees from a defined-benefit plan to a hybrid plan that includes a defined contribution component.

The current pension system faces a more than $37 billion unfunded liability, one of the highest compared with any U.S. state. The liability is almost four times the island’s annual government budget.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Puerto Rico gov't signals support for gay adoption

Puerto Rico‘s government is supporting an effort to overturn a ban on gay adoption in the U.S. island territory.

Puerto Rico‘s Supreme Court narrowly voted in February to uphold an island law banning adoptions by same-sex parents. The woman whose adoption request was at the heart of the case asked the court to reconsider that decision.

Island Attorney General Margarita Mercado has now filed a motion in support of reconsideration. Mercado said the government of Gov. Alejandro Garcia Padilla favors eliminating unequal treatment based on gender or sexual orientation.

The woman’s attorney, Nora Roberts, welcomed the motion Tuesday. It remains uncertain if the court will revisit its 5-4 ruling. Lawmakers in Puerto Rico have been considering a number of proposals to extend more rights to gays and lesbians.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Puerto Rico teachers protest changing pension plan

Dozens of teachers in Puerto Rico are protesting a proposal to cut retirement benefits and increase employee contributions to help save the island’s crumbling public pension system.

The teachers gathered Friday afternoon in front of the governor’s mansion in colonial Old San Juan.

Union leader Maria Lara Fontanez says teachers met with Gov. Alejandro Garcia Padilla last week to talk about their concerns but says they did not receive any guarantee the pension system wouldn’t be changed.

Economists have said the teachers’ pension plan is slightly healthier than a plan that covers other government employees in the U.S. territory.

The protest comes two days after a similar protest by hundreds of police officers.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Puerto Rico slowly warms to more gay rights

The advance of gay rights across the United States is spreading into Puerto Rico, making the island a relatively gay-friendly outpost in a Caribbean region where sodomy laws and harassment of gays are still common.

The governing Popular Democratic Party is pushing a bill through the legislature that would outlaw discrimination based on gender or sexual orientation, a step taken by about half of U.S. states. Another bill would extend a domestic violence law to gay couples.

Soon after taking office in January, Gov. Alejandro Garcia Padilla signed an order extending health insurance coverage to the live-in partners of workers in his executive branch of government, regardless of gender.

And a popular former conservative governor, Pedro Rossello, surprised supporters and foes when he stated last month that he unequivocally supports gay marriage.

“We’re in a period where it’s important to talk about human rights,” said Rossello, who 14 years ago signed a law as governor to prohibit the recognition of same-sex marriages held abroad.

“This is extraordinary,” said Pedro Julio Serrano, a Puerto Rican gay activist. “We’ve reached a point of no return in Puerto Rico … Equality is inevitable.”

“The issues that we’re discussing publicly now would have been unthinkable a couple decades ago,” said Osvaldo Burgos, spokesman for the Broad Committee for the Search for Equality, which represents more than a dozen local human rights organizations.

Gay rights activists also say they are encouraged that the island’s Justice Department is prosecuting its first hate crime case for the killing of a hairstylist who was set on fire.

The momentum has not all been one way, however. The island’s Supreme Court last week narrowly upheld a law that bars same-sex couples from adopting children. Despite a string of legalizations in the U.S. over the past decade, adoptions by same-sex couples remain banned in many U.S. states as well.

And many Puerto Ricans remain uncomfortable with the changes. Church groups in February rallied an estimated 200,000 people against a move to include gay couples under domestic violence laws.

The spokesman for that march, Cesar Vazquez, said the state should not meddle with marriage and the family, and a prominent Puerto Rican pastor, Wanda Rolon, said children should not be taught …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Puerto Rico airport privatization deal lifts off

Puerto Rico‘s governor on Tuesday approved turning over the operations of Puerto Rico‘s largest airport to a private company as part of an estimated $2.6 billion deal that began under his predecessor and has been fiercely protested.

Gov. Alejandro Garcia Padilla said that while he would have managed things differently, the U.S. territory’s government already had committed to the deal.

Puerto Rico gave its word and we must be firm and transparent in honoring it,” he said in an announcement hours before the deal would have expired, with dozens of protesters gathered outside Garcia’s office pledging civil disobedience in upcoming weeks.

Garcia had faced pressure from unions and legislators from his own party who have criticized the proposed 40-year contract with Aerostar Airport Holdings, saying it will lead to lost jobs, reduced wages and potentially higher costs for passengers.

Garcia, however, said the deal needed to be signed because the island’s Port Authority has to pay a $600 million debt Wednesday and a $340 million debt in June.

Right now, the Port Authority has zero dollars to invest in this airport,” he said. “As everyone who has visited the airport knows, its infrastructure has to be improved greatly and quickly.”

It is the second U.S. airport to sign a deal under the Federal Aviation Administration‘s pilot privatization program, which was approved in 1996 and aims to allow states or local governments to tap into private funds.

The FAA informed Puerto Rico‘s government late Monday that it had approved the lease deal “subject to certain conditions,” Port Authority Director Victor Suarez said.

Among the requirements is that the Port Authority cannot use airport revenue from other regional airports to compensate Aerostar. It also must submit an annual performance report on its regional airports as well as a transition plan on the 35th year of the agreement.

The FAA said the Port Authority has collected nearly $26 million in passenger facility charges, but the money has not been used for projects that were approved to use those funds. The FAA added that it is unclear whether the unaccounted funds were used for allowable airport purposes, and said that under the deal the Port Authority must submit an audit of that account.

Aerostar …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Puerto Rico teeters on fiscal edge over pensions

Office clerk Lillian Marti hopes to retire one day with a decent pension. Now, like many other employees of Puerto Rico‘s government, she’s beginning to fear she might not get that chance.

“Of course, I’m worried,” said the 61-year-old, who has worked for the government for 20 years.

Some experts are calling for cutting benefits to help Puerto Rico confront what economists and financial analysts say is a ticking fiscal time bomb: A public pension system with a $37.3 billion unfunded liability that must be addressed soon, at a time when the U.S. island territory’s government has little money to spare.

The unfunded liability, which is spread across three public pension systems, is almost four times the annual government budget for the island of nearly 4 million people. Only a few much larger U.S. states, such as California and Illinois, face bigger unfunded liabilities.

Puerto Rico‘s problem stems from decades of neglect as politicians facing budget deficits were unwilling to set aside money for the growing ranks of retired police, firefighters, teachers and office workers. Now many analysts and even some government officials concede it is the most critical issue facing the administration of newly elected Gov. Alejandro Garcia Padilla.

“This is the most important financial issue right now,” said Gustavo Velez, a prominent Puerto Rican economist. “They have to find a solution. They have to create a plan in the next three months.”

Velez and others suggest that Puerto Rico should immediately reduce benefits, raise the retirement age and demand increased contributions from current employees, ideas that don’t sit well with people like Marti.

“Imagine, I’m going to be left without a big chunk of money that I contributed,” she said.

Garcia, who defeated the incumbent with support of the public employee unions, has formed a committee to come up with suggestions. He has not yet said how he will address the situation. Simply taking the money from the island’s general fund is out of the question: Puerto Rico has a projected deficit this year of $1.2 billion.

“It’s a very complex situation,” Garcia said at recent news conference. “We will respect the pensions of those who contributed and built this country.”

The island only recently emerged from a six-year recession and the unemployment rate is 14 percent, higher than any state. Manufacturing, the largest segment of the economy, has been in decline for years. Former Gov. Luis Fortuno laid off more than 20,000 government workers. His predecessor, Anibal Acevedo Vila, was forced to partially shut down the government for two weeks in May 2006 in a standoff over budget talks with the legislature.

In the meantime, the pension system’s deficit kept growing.

“It’s not that we’re bad off. We’re broke,” said Miguel Morales, a consultant to a permanent committee charged with regulating the pension system. “The concern is that there will come a day when the government cannot respond and everyone will be left out on the street.”

Nearly all of the problem centers on two pension systems — one for teachers and one for other government workers — that stopped accepting new beneficiaries in January 2000. They serve more than 273,000 active and retired government workers.

Those initially allowed workers to retire at age 55 with 25 years of service or at age 58 with 10 years of service. In 1990, legislators made significant changes, reducing benefits and increasing the retirement age from 55 to 65 years for newly hired workers.

As liabilities mounted, legislators scrapped that system 13 years ago, creating a new system that is more like a 401(k)-type plan in which workers must make their own contributions.

The newer defined-contribution plan is considered financially stable. But the older plan will have used up its assets “within several years,” Karen Krop, a senior director of public finance at Fitch Ratings.

If the system does collapse, the island’s general fund is supposed to honor those collections. “But the general fund doesn’t have that money,” Velez said.

Nearly three years ago, former Gov. Fortuno established a committee charged with solving the pension fund’s problems, noting that the overall system was paying $679 million more a year than what it received in contributions.

“Absent any corrective measures, the systems could be left without funds in or before 10 years,” he stated in a March 2010 executive order.

That study led lawmakers to increase employee contributions to the system and they transferred $162 million into the retirement system so that officials could buy a capital bond expected to generate $1.5 billion in 40 years. But it wasn’t enough to solve the problem.

Puerto Rico‘s public pension problems also have damaged the island’s bond ratings, which remain significantly lower than any U.S. state, raising the island’s cost of borrowing.

In December, Moody’s lowered Puerto Rico‘s credit rating, stating in part that it doesn’t have a clear idea as to how and when the government will solve the retirement systems’ problems. It warned of an additional credit rating downgrade if no reforms are undertaken.

Complicating the territory’s financial situation is its $69 billion public debt.

Puerto Rico debt levels are well, well in excess of what we see in other states,” Krop of Fitch Ratings said.

Most states have an average 3 percent of tax-supported debt as a percentage of personal income. Nine percent is considered high. Puerto Rico is at 80 percent, Krop said. The per capita debt is more than $12,000 per person, excluding pension, she added.

Given those numbers, Marti said she doesn’t believe she’ll have enough money to retire. She went back to work in part to collect more Social Security, but even then, she said the federal fiscal situation doesn’t give her much hope.

“Things are not easy,” she said. “You don’t know what’s going to happen with Social Security either.”

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Puerto Rico party pushes for part-time legislature

Leaders of the party that recently won control of Puerto Rico‘s legislature want put the House of Representatives on part-time status for the first time in nearly two decades.

The move would save millions of dollars and make the government of the U.S. territory more efficient, according to members of the Popular Democratic Party who made the announcement late Monday.

Just how long the House of Representatives would meet, and what members would be paid, is still under study by a commission, but the incoming president of the body, Jaime Perello, said the changes will be approved by July 1.

Lawmakers also plan to eliminate their food and transportation stipends and cut other costs by 30 percent reduction, he said.

Like more than a dozen U.S. states, Puerto Rico had a part-time, January-to-June legislature until 1997, when it moved to a full-time body aimed at tackling the island’s growing problems.

Since then, pay for Puerto Rican legislators has risen to among the highest in any U.S. jurisdiction at nearly $74,000 a year on average. They also receive as much as $162 a day in food stipends and $1,460 in monthly transportation stipends.

Perello said that $3 million of the money saved will be used to investigate at least 42,000 child abuse cases that were never resolved, and another $1 million will be used to activate the National Guard to help fight crime, while $500,000 will go toward buying new equipment for the island’s Institute of Forensic Science.

While the House majority is plunging ahead with the plan, the Senate has not yet agreed.

“The idea of a civilian legislator must be discussed as part of an open and in-depth process, with public hearings and with participation from everyone,” said incoming Senate President Eduardo Bhatia, though he has promised to eliminate senators’ food and travel stipends.

New Gov. Alejandro Garcia Padilla, who was sworn in on Jan. 2, has called for legislative reform and is widely expected to submit a bill calling for both houses of the legislature to work part-time.

Former Senate President Thomas Rivera Schatz, a member of the New Progressive Party, accused the new majority of “improvising and acting irresponsibly.”

Even governing party Rep. Luis Vega Ramos expressed reservations, saying he worries about potential conflicts of interest involving legislators’ other jobs. He suggested that cutting the legislature too far “would allow the executive branch to have an exclusive hold on the country’s public agenda,” and added, “We could unwittingly be upsetting the balance of power.”

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News