You are invited to a fundraising and Information-sharing event for the newly established non-profit lobbying and advocacy organization Americans for Medicare in Mexico, A.C.
We are working to develop a comprehensive and politically achievable plan to bring Medicare coverage to eligible seniors residing in Mexico. Coordinating efforts with health policy and public policy professionals, health care providers and intermediaries in Mexico, and Medicare Program Directors, our goal is introduction and passage of required authorizing legislation in the U.S. Congress as part of an overall health reform bill to be debated later this year.
Since early March, Americans for Medicare in Mexico leaders have completed hundreds of hours of development work on this project, and have traveled twice to Washington DC, and have met with:
- approximately 40 Members of the U.S. House and Senate
- the Medicare Program Oversight Manager in the Office of Management & Budget
- the International Policy Director of American Association of Retired People (AARP)
- the Deputy Director for Health Policy at the Center for American Progress
- other public policy and political advocacy experts supportive of the initiative
The event will be held at the home of:
Chickie and Irwin Alter
Km 422 Carretera Barra de Navidad, Puerto Vallarta
Wednesday, May 13, 2009, 1 to 4 pm
$200 pesos per person (includes one drink and botanas provided by Beto Está Contento Restaurant)
Directions:
Casa Chickie is in a gated community 3 minutes south of the OxxO store in Conchas Chinas
It is on the mountain side, on the left, exactly after the first curve as past the white condos called Playa del Sol on the waterside (right hand side coming from town).
It is not well marked but leading up to the green gates is a stone driveway and two small gate stations.
If you are coming from the South it is after the right curve as you pass the big deserted building on the waterside.
Please RSVP!
- Paul Crist, paulcrist (at) hotel-mercurio.com
- Dee Dee Camhi, rdcamhi (at) mac.com
A group of us took an ATV tour on Palm Sunday with a company called Unique Tours. We started the trip by meeting at the stables for the Yamaha Grizzly ATVs on Basilio Badillo in Old Town, Puerto Vallarta, early in the morning.
After an hour on the dusty road our caravan of big-tire beasts halted at the top of a hill and we saw distant mountains hung with clouds, a foretelling of the Pacific Ocean. Gary told us that this was where we were headed.
All my life I have heard about these out of the way beaches in Mexico where you could rent a room or pitch a tent and hang out for a time with the ocean. Well, there it was. Driftwood and skull statues, homemade signs, dogs under the tables, fish cooking on the outdoor grill and a hotel that was really sweet. From the people hanging out, Brenda and I got the scoop on how to make sarandeado sauce and we talked broken Spanish to the barefooted cook told us with a laugh that his name was “chef.” We cruised the hotel, taking photos, and met a family here on vacation with their kids and of course, their Chihuahua pup. Rincon means inside corner, and that is exactly what this place was.
The oysters are sold by the platter full, at 160 pesos for a very large platter of 12 to 18, depending on oyster sizes. I can’t imagine one person eating a whole platter but one of our group managed without any hint of a problem. These are the freshest oysters you can buy, coming straight from the ocean. Of course, now the oysters are cheaper in Vallarta, but who cares, when you are going to the “source?”
It was a long day, but, aside from the bruising and embarrassment from the accident, it had been a fascinating trip. The aptly named Unique Tours really does offer something different (except for those who wreck) from the usual extreme sport aura of the ATV. This tour went beyond the everyday tourist script and offered a kind of laid-back, flexible path through a truer part of Mexico. It was more about the exploration than it was about the ride.