PLANE RECOVERED FROM CONDADO LAGOON
As reported by Noticel, a Piper PA-23 aircraft that crashed into
Condado Lagoon in San Juan on Monday afternoon has been re-
covered. Pilot Rafael Pesquera, age 49, and co-pilot Ramón
Garida, also 49, were not seriously injured. Authorities dragged
the fallen aircraft to the shore of the lagoon yesterday, and it will
be taken to Isla Grande airport once fuel and the wings are remo-
ved. The exact cause of the accident is unknown, but apparently
the plane's engines stopped functioning not long after takeoff
from Isla Grande.
SOME INMATES TO LOSE VOTING RIGHTS
As reported today by El Vocero, the Chamber of Representatives
passed a bill last night that would strip prison inmates convicted
of major offenses of the right to vote in Puerto Rican elections.
Representative Carlos Vargas was behind the measure, and was
ableto get the votes to pass it as part of a deal in which he would
vote for the proposed oil tax increase, or "crudita". It is unknown
whether Governor Alejandro Garcia Padilla will sign the bill.
LOWERING IVA ON SOME ITEMS CONSIDERED
From The San Juan Daily Star:
After meeting for several hours with House leaders, Gov. Alejandro
García Padilla is now accepting the idea of amending Tax Reform to
possibly introduce reduced rates of the value-added tax to certain
products and services and obtain needed votes in the House to pass
the bill. House Speaker Jaime Perelló and Majority Leader Charlie
Hernández met with the governor hours before he was slated to go
to the airwaves in support of his tax reform.
PR JOINS DIET SUPPLEMENT PROBE
From The Chicago Tribune:
Dietary supplements are facing more scrutiny from U.S. regulators
as two states and Puerto Rico joined New York in a probe of the
$33 billion industry after testing showed some products didn't
appear to contain key ingredients advertised. Attorneys general in
Connecticut and Indiana and the Puerto Rico Department of Consumer
Affairs will investigate industry business practices and whether
claims of authenticity and purity are valid, Attorney General Eric
Schneiderman said Tuesday in a statement.
CLARO EXTENDS BROADBAND IN YAUCO
From News Is My Business:
Telecommunications company Claro announced Monday it has extended
broadband services to eight sectors in the town of Yauco, where a
combined 965 families will have access to the benefits associated
with high-speed Internet. The sectors of Algarrobo, Caimito,
Collores, Rancheras, Cotuy, Diego Hernández, Aguas Blancas, Naranjo
and Carrizales in Yauco join the initiative being bankrolled by the
Federal Communications Commission to boost rich broadband across
regions.
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