Alfredo Catalán

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Alfredo Catalán Schick is the current mayor of El Hatillo Municipality in Venezuela. He is affiliated with Project Venezuela. He was first elected mayor of El Hatillo in 2000. In 2004 he was reelected for a second term.

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[edit] Career as a mayor

In 2001 the mayor stated that his main goal for the municipality was to promote it as a touristic destination.[1] In fact, Catalán's first year in office was focused on improving the appearance of the municipality, and the El Hatillo Independent Institute of Tourism and Recreation was created.[2] Operation Joy (Spanish: Operación Alegría), a project that attempts to make the municipality cleaner and nicer, has been in action during Catalán's government.[1]

According to the municipality website, Catalán's government has made improvements to the educational facilities of the area, including the repair of five state-owned schools that support 1,400 students. Special programs have been implemented for students, such as drug prevention, water conservation, the Francisco de Miranda Project, which suggests the use of technology to improve children's education, and other programs that also benefit the municipality by getting citizens more involved in the community activities.[3]

[edit] Criticism

Some individuals, such as the journalist Nelson Bocaranda, have criticized Catalán's administration regarding the municipality's insecurity.[4] Bocaranda himself was a victim of death threats after criticizing Catalán's government in his radio emission Los Run Runes de Nelson. According to the IFEX, the mayor's father Norberto Catalán, went to Bocaranda's office in La Lagunita with his bodyguard. Bocaranda was not in his office at the time, but his secretary was told that Norberto was armed and he would shoot the journalist if he did not take his comments back within 24 hours. The mayor's father also left threatening notes. A security video camera recorded the incident.[4]

[edit] Government bankruptcy

In 2001, Alfredo Catalán mentioned in several occasions that the municipality was bankrupted. He said to the media that a lot had been done for El Hatillo for a first year in office, and since the beginning of his fist term, Catalán had given priority to tourism. Between the five municipalities of Caracas, El Hatillo receives the least income from taxes, but he believed that Operation Joy would give the residents trust in the mayor, and more investments have been done in culture and tourism than in a new local government headquarters for example.[1] Catalán denounced that Flora Aranguren, the previous mayor, had left a deficit of almost US$500,000 between budget and treasury.[5]

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c Espinosa, María Elsia. "'En quiebra' pero hacia adelante", El Universal, 2006-03-08. Retrieved on 2001-08-11. 
  2. ^ Alcaldía El Hatillo (2004). Turismo. Retrieved on 2006-07-19.
  3. ^ Alcaldía El Hatillo (2004). Educación. Retrieved on 2006-03-29.
  4. ^ a b International Freedom of Expression eXchange. Journalist receives death threats. Retrieved on 2006-07-18.
  5. ^ "Situación económica de El Hatillo es 'delicada'", El Universal, 2001-03-17. Retrieved on 2006-07-19. 
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