Jaime Barlucea

Jaime H. Barlucea Maldonado (born February 14, 1971) is a Puerto Rican politician and the current mayor of Adjuntas. Barlucea is affiliated with the New Progressive Party (PNP) and has served as mayor since 2005.[1]

Jaime Barlucea Maldonado
Mayor of Adjuntas
Assumed office
January 14, 2005
Preceded byRoberto Vera Monroig
Personal details
Born (1971-02-14) February 14, 1971
Ponce, Puerto Rico
Political partyNew Progressive Party (PNP)
ChildrenJamie
Michelle
Chelsie
Alma materPontifical Catholic University of Puerto Rico

Early years and studies

Jaime H. Barlucea Maldonado was born in Ponce on February 14, 1971. His parents are Jaime Barlucea Ortíz and Rosa María Maldonado Alvarez.

Barlucea completed a Bachelor's degree in Political Science and Public Administration from the Pontifical Catholic University of Puerto Rico.

Public service

Barlucea served as Regional Director of Fomento Cooperativo in Ponce. He also served as Special Aide for the President of the Commission on Public Service, among other positions.

Political career

Barlucea began his political career serving as member of the Municipal Assembly of Adjuntas. In 2004, he ran for mayor of the city, defeating incumbent Roberto Vera Monroig.[1] After that, Barlucea has been reelected three times (2008, 2012 and 2016).

Personal life

Barlucea has three daughters: Jamie, Michelle, and Chelsie.

gollark: The 80% of power back thing pretends the grid is a large battery, when it's *not*, and you'll just be using fossil fuels probably.
gollark: Well, sure. But I don't think it's a good general solution.
gollark: Nuclear is much better, but people go "OH NO NUCLEAR SCARY" and yet seemingly do not care about the alternative effectively being fossil fuels?
gollark: Or batteries, which have their own problems.
gollark: The panels are really energy-intensive to produce anyway, degrade after 20 years, and you need uncool fossil-fuel plants to cover for the solar panels when they don't produce, which is often.

References

  1. "Alcalde de Adjuntas, Elecciones Generales 2004". CEEPUR. Archived from the original on 2012-10-06. Retrieved 2013-01-17.



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