Post by account_disabled on Feb 22, 2024 7:05:19 GMT -5
The national leader of the PRI, Enrique Ochoa, donated to two foundations the settlement of 1.2 million pesos that they gave him when he resigned from the Federal Electricity Commission (CFE), a Reforma report indicated this Friday, December 23. On September 26, citing documents sent to Méxicoleaks, Animal Político reported that Ochoa had received a settlement equivalent to nine months of his salary at the Federal Electricity Commission (CFE), despite the fact that he was director of this company for only two years. and five months since he was not fired, but resigned. Since then, Ochoa insisted that it was a correct amount, and that the settlement had been granted to him in accordance with CFE regulations. “The settlement is legal and will remain so.
Donation is an act of will that does not seek to hide anything improper. It is a transparent and public act,” Ochoa mentioned when asked about his decision to donate the money. The two organizations to which he decided to give the 1.2 million pesos are Fundación Michou y Mau, which is dedicated to caring for burned children, and Iceland Mobile Number List Fundación UNAM. “A few months ago we decided as a family to donate the income received from the CFE settlement. Donating it now is favorable after the misfortune in Tultepec. We must be in solidarity with the people who are experiencing a tragedy,” said the PRI leader. However, Stevens highlighted that any recovery action for this section of the forest must begin with the establishment of a Master Management Plan, which to date does not exist. The neighborhood representative of Lomas Virreyes was accompanied at the press conference by residents of the Polanco, San Miguel Chapultepec, Loma Hermosa and Ampliación Granada neighborhoods, as well as Mónica del Villar and Luz Emilia Aguilar Zinser, member and former member respectively of the Governing Council Citizen of the Chapultepec Forest.
Mónica del Villar stressed that the members of the Citizen Governing Council have the obligation to “safeguard the forest and listen to citizen demands (…) And I want to emphasize that we all seek to reestablish the Third Section of the Forest,” but this process must occur respecting “its vocation primordial, which is environmental: we want an urban forest that is a model for the 21st century.” In turn, Luz Emilia Aguilar Zinser, who concluded her period as a member of the Citizen Governing Council last month, highlighted that since its creation, this civil body has maintained the criterion of returning to the Third Section of the Chapultepec Forest all those fragments that have been detached from it, as the concessions for said spaces have expired.
Donation is an act of will that does not seek to hide anything improper. It is a transparent and public act,” Ochoa mentioned when asked about his decision to donate the money. The two organizations to which he decided to give the 1.2 million pesos are Fundación Michou y Mau, which is dedicated to caring for burned children, and Iceland Mobile Number List Fundación UNAM. “A few months ago we decided as a family to donate the income received from the CFE settlement. Donating it now is favorable after the misfortune in Tultepec. We must be in solidarity with the people who are experiencing a tragedy,” said the PRI leader. However, Stevens highlighted that any recovery action for this section of the forest must begin with the establishment of a Master Management Plan, which to date does not exist. The neighborhood representative of Lomas Virreyes was accompanied at the press conference by residents of the Polanco, San Miguel Chapultepec, Loma Hermosa and Ampliación Granada neighborhoods, as well as Mónica del Villar and Luz Emilia Aguilar Zinser, member and former member respectively of the Governing Council Citizen of the Chapultepec Forest.
Mónica del Villar stressed that the members of the Citizen Governing Council have the obligation to “safeguard the forest and listen to citizen demands (…) And I want to emphasize that we all seek to reestablish the Third Section of the Forest,” but this process must occur respecting “its vocation primordial, which is environmental: we want an urban forest that is a model for the 21st century.” In turn, Luz Emilia Aguilar Zinser, who concluded her period as a member of the Citizen Governing Council last month, highlighted that since its creation, this civil body has maintained the criterion of returning to the Third Section of the Chapultepec Forest all those fragments that have been detached from it, as the concessions for said spaces have expired.