Ramón Luis Rivera Jr.

Ramón Luis Rivera Jr. (born February 3, 1956) is a Puerto Rican politician affiliated with the New Progressive Party. He is the current Mayor of Bayamón, and succeeded his father, Ramon Luis Rivera, when the latter decided to retire after 23 years in office (1977 - 2000).[1]

Ramón Luis Rivera Jr.
Ramón Luis Rivera (right) with Pedro Pierluisi (left)
Mayor of Bayamón, Puerto Rico
Assumed office
January 1, 2001
Preceded byRamón Luis Rivera
Member of the Senate of Puerto Rico for Bayamón district
In office
1993-2000
Personal details
Born (1956-02-03) February 3, 1956
Bayamón, Puerto Rico
Political partyNew Progressive Party (PNP)
ProfessionRealtor

Rivera served as a member of the Senate of Puerto Rico for the District of Bayamón from 1993 to 2000. He has been mayor of Bayamón since then.[2]

Early life

Ramón Luis Rivera Cruz was born on February 3, 1956. He is the first born of 5 siblings, son to Ramón Luis Rivera and Angélica Cruz. Luis Rivera Jr. attended Colegio Santo Domingo and Escuela Papa Juan XXIII for elementary and secondary school, respectively. Later he continued higher studies in Colegio Universitario Tecnológico de Bayamón de la Universidad de Puerto Rico and American University of Puerto Rico, where he gained a Bachelor of Business Administration. In 1994 Luis River Jr. married Narel Waleska Colón and had two sons: Ramon Luis III and André Efraín.[2]

Political career

In 1980, he started his political career as campaign manager for his father, Ramón Luis Rivera, the then-mayor of Bayamon seeking reelection. He was elected as a senator of the Bayamón district in 1992 and was reelected again in 1996.[3]

During his time in the Senate, he was a chairman of different committees. Between them, Committee of Urbanism and Infrastructure, Committee on Ethics, Committee on Youth and the Committee of Recreation and Sports.

In 2000, he aspired for the mayorship of Bayamon, the position his father had served since 1977. He won the mayorship and has been reelected four more times.

gollark: > 10 percent of BLM protests are violent. that means if you have 12 protests in your area you are guaranteed to be hurt, or have property damageRandom nitpicking, but that is *not* how probabilities work.
gollark: Although, I'm not sure how a "no capital system" is meant to work, given that you need capital to produce basically anything.
gollark: Lots of the things fitting into each category are completely different from each other in other ways.
gollark: But that's not necessarily a *good* dichotomy.
gollark: Well, if you split the entire possible space of economic systems into two areas, then yes, things go into those two areas.

References

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