Saturday, May 17, 2025

Environment ministry hopes for presidential decree to ban herbicide

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The Environment and Agricultural ministries have clashed over the use of a herbicide.
The Environment and Agricultural ministries have clashed over the use of a herbicide.

The federal Environment Ministry (Semarnat) is pushing for a presidential decree that would ban the use of the herbicide glyphosate although the Ministry of Agriculture may have a different view.

Environment Minister Víctor Manuel Toledo told a virtual forum Tuesday that he was hopeful that President López Obrador would issue a decree against glyphosate, the active ingredient in the Monsanto herbicide Roundup, whose effect on human health is hotly contested.

He said the aim is to completely eliminate the use of glyphosate by 2024.

The environment minister said Semarnat is seeking a ban on a total of 80 herbicides and pesticides due to the harm they cause human health and/or the environment.

Toledo said the Environment Ministry is currently working to clean up six highly-contaminated waterways where children have become sick due to exposure to glyphosate.

Toledo, left, and Villalobos.
Toledo, left, and Villalobos.

Semarnat, led by Toledo since May 2019, began banning the importation of the controversial herbicide last November, invoking the “precautionary principle” enshrined in national and international law. To date, the ministry has stopped the importation of some 67,000 tonnes, Reforma reported.

Toledo reiterated in May that action toward a total ban on the use of the herbicide was urgently needed.

He said at the time there was clear evidence that glyphosate – mainly used in Mexico’s south and southeast – has caused damage to people’s health and the country’s biodiversity.

In June, Semarnat and the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (Sader) agreed to form a working group to establish a plan to phase out its use over the next four years and to assess the risk the product poses.

Sader on Tuesday sent a draft plan to the National Commission for Regulatory Improvement (Conamer) that said the ministry, along with Semarnat and the National Council of Science, would carry out the necessary technical studies to assess the safety of glyphosate. If it is deemed to be unsafe, new technology will be developed to manufacture a substitute, it said.

In its proposal, the Agriculture Ministry said the safety studies would be carried out over a period of four years whereas Semarnat wants glyphosate to be completely banned within the same time frame.

Glyphosate, the herbicide at the center of the debate.
Glyphosate, the herbicide at the center of the debate.

As a result, Toledo lashed out at Sader, asserting that the draft plan it sent to Conamer went against López Obrador’s instructions.

ANEC, a national agricultural association opposed to the use of glyphosate, also rejected Sader’s proposal, charging that Agriculture Minister Víctor Villalobos acted unilaterally in its formulation and agreeing with Toledo that it contravened the president’s instructions.

It called on López Obrador to ensure compliance with the agreements reached for the use of glyphosate to be phased out.

ANEC said that a joint strategy toward a new agri-food model in which toxic agricultural products are not used is urgently needed.

“The government … set out the urgent need to rescue the countryside and guide the country toward [agricultural] self-sufficiency and food sovereignty. In this sense, it’s clear that the corporate industrial agriculture model … has not been able to nor will it be able to create alternatives” that allow Mexican farms to thrive while protecting people’s health and the environment.

Source: Reforma (sp) 

Promotional video for Acapulco tourism pulled after getting cool reception

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A screenshot from the promotional video that was pulled from social media.
A screenshot from the promotional video that was pulled from social media.

Guerrero and federal tourism authorities have withdrawn a tourism promotion video for Acapulco amid claims that it struck the wrong tone as the coronavirus pandemic continues to rage.

“Since 1930 Acapulco has made its own rules, … Acapulco is an icon of global tourism. Today we stop being a postcard from the past, today we change the rules,” begins the video’s voice-over.

“In fact there are no rules: eat what you want; have fun at day, night and in the small hours; wear what you want; … invite who you want; … relax on your own or with company; redefine yourself and share your craziness; … fall in love without limits. Here you can be whoever you want to be or you can be yourself. … Make lots of friends and new loves,” the voice-over continues.

Featuring fair-skinned and apparently affluent young people, the video concludes with a woman saying (in English), “Mom, I’m in Acapulco.”

Acapulco and Guerrero tourism authorities and the federal Tourism Ministry (Sectur) posted the video to social media on Tuesday but subsequently erased the posts amid criticism that a pandemic is not the time to promote the disregard of rules.

Acapulco: video de Promoción Turística Mom, I'm in Acapulco

The video was made by an advertising agency for the Acapulco Tourism Promotion Trust and the Guerrero Tourism Ministry but was condemned by Governor Héctor Astudillo.

“I regret the mistaken promotional campaign for Acapulco,” he wrote on Twitter, labeling the video “untimely, insensitive and imprudent” given that the coronavirus pandemic is still hitting Mexico, and Guerrero, hard.

“Visitors, as we have always said, we’re waiting for you here #WhenThisPasses,” the governor added.

Gerardo Herrera, a marketing academic at the Iberoamericana University, told the newspaper El País that the video had good intentions – to attract more young people to Acapulco, according to the Guerrero government – but was poorly executed.

He said the video amounted to a “call to imprudence and excess” and given that the world is going through a pandemic, it’s not the right time to do that.

“At no time does it mention safety and the [coronavirus mitigation] measures with which tourism must be reactivated,”Herrera said. “The message that should be given is one of safety.”

It's 'untimely, insensitive and imprudent,' said the governor of the campaign.
It’s ‘untimely, insensitive and imprudent,’ said the governor.

The academic agreed with the many Twitter users who also complained that the video was directed at upper-class, privileged Mexicans who can afford to take a luxurious beach holiday while millions struggle to survive the sharp coronavirus-induced economic downturn.

“It’s a message directed to a premium sector [of the market] when it should be more inclusive and directed to all social strata,” Herrera said.

Sectur distanced itself from the video, saying that Acapulco and Guerrero authorities were in charge of the campaign and that it  merely shared it on social media.

Sectur said in a statement that it disseminated the Acapulco video via its social networks “as occurs with all the promotion campaigns that the country’s different tourism destinations carry out.”

The Tourism Ministry added that it decided to remove the video from its social media accounts due to the “various reactions” it generated.

Acapulco’s hotels, beaches, and restaurants reopened to tourists in early July after remaining closed for three months due to coronavirus restrictions but visitor numbers to the Pacific coast resort city remain low.

Source: Reforma (sp), El País (sp) 

AMLO repeats proposal that public decide fate of Sinaloa fertilizer plant

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Protesters demand a halt to Sinaloa fertilizer plant.
Protesters demand a halt to plant in Topolobampo.

President López Obrador has renewed his proposal that a public consultation be held to decide the fate of a fertilizer plant project in Topolobampo, Sinaloa.

During a visit to the northern state on Wednesday, López Obrador acknowledged that local authorities support the US $5-billion ammonia and urea plant project under construction by the company Gas y Petroquímica de Occidente (GPO) but noted that there have been protests against it.

For that reason, citizens must be given the opportunity to participate in a vote to decided whether the project can continue, he said.

“Only with a consultation [can it go ahead]. … It will be difficult because there are protests, there are groups that don’t accept it. The people should be the ones who decide, we can’t impose anything,” the president told reporters in Los Mochis, located 20 kilometers from Topolobampo.

López Obrador first called for a consultation on the fertilizer plant in June last year, and said that an investigation would be carried out to determine whether it would “harm or benefit citizens.”

Construction of the plant began in August 2018 but a federal judge halted the project in March 2019 due to environmental concerns.

The Aquí No (Not Here) Collective has been granted several injunctions that have stalled the project, and has rejected López Obrador’s proposal to hold a public consultation about its future, demanding that he cancel it instead.

Many fishermen say the plant will cause irreparable damage to the Santa María, Topolobampo and Ohuira lagoons and restrict the area in which they can work.

Environmental activists say that marine life such as turtles and bottlenose dolphins will be adversely affected, while the head of the federal government’s Natural Protected Areas Commission said last year that having an ammonia plant so close to lagoons that are protected by the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands of International Importance “is not possible.”

GPO, a subsidiary of Swiss-German engineering, procurement and construction group Proman AG, has rejected claims that the plant’s operation would damage the environment.

The company and supporters of the project say the fertilizer plant is needed because ammonia production has not kept up with growing demand. As a result, imports have increased and farmers have had to pay more for fertilizer.

GPO hopes to begin production at the new plant in the first half of 2022. The plant would produce about 800,000 tonnes of ammonia and 700,000 tonnes of urea per year for the domestic market.

Several public consultations on a range of projects have been held since López Obrador took office in December 2018.

Most recently, a US $1.4-billion brewery that was under construction by the United States company Constellation Brands was canceled in March after a vote found 76.1% of participants opposed it.

López Obrador canceled the previous government’s US $13-billion Mexico City airport project after a consultation held before he took office found that 70% of participants favored his plan to convert a México state airport into a commercial one.

Government critics say the cancellations of the partially-built brewery and airport have hurt investor confidence and will cost Mexico huge amounts of money in the long term.

Source: Reforma (sp) 

Atlantic hurricane forecast amended as more storms expected

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Floodwaters caused by Hurricane Gilbert in 1988, one of the most powerful storms ever recorded in the Atlantic.
Floodwaters caused by Hurricane Gilbert in 1988, one of the most powerful storms ever recorded in the Atlantic.

The hurricane season is off to a stormy start in the Atlantic this year, setting new records.

The latest was Hurricane Isais, which left at least five people dead as it ripped through the eastern United States this week and was the earliest ninth named storm in history.

And many are storms are to come, according to the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), which has updated its Atlantic storm predictions for 2020. 

Usually, only two named storms form by August, and typically 12 named storms will form throughout the season, with six becoming hurricanes and three developing into major hurricanes. 

On Thursday, however, the NOAA announced it is expecting 19 to 25 named storms with seven to 11 becoming hurricanes,  three to six of them being major hurricanes.

That’s up from the earlier forecast of 13 to 19 named storms (storms with wind speeds over 63 km/h), of which six to 10 would become hurricanes.

hurricane season
Batten down the hatches.

“This is one of the most active seasonal forecasts that NOAA has produced in its 22-year history of hurricane outlooks,” U.S. Secretary of Commerce Wilbur Ross stated as the likelihood of an above-normal Atlantic hurricane season soars to 85%. When NOAA’s original forecast was made in May, the likelihood of an above-average hurricane season was assessed at just 60%.

There are a number of factors that contribute to an increase in storm formation. Water temperatures in the Atlantic and Caribbean are warmer than usual, especially in the area near West Africa and the Leeward Islands where many hurricanes are born. 

In addition, western Africa is seeing an especially active monsoon season, which can help form thunderstorms off its coast.

La Niña has also cooled waters of the Pacific, weakening trade winds over the Atlantic and lessening vertical wind shear which can stop a storm in its tracks.

Researchers at NOAA and the University of Wisconsin released a study in June indicating that global warming may also help produce stronger storms that can intensify very rapidly. 

While the forecast calls for more windy weather, it also means there could be a shortage of storm names.

If 21 named storms form before the end of the hurricane season, forecasters would have to resort to naming them after the Greek alphabet, a situation that has occurred just once before when there were 27 named storms in 2005.

Colorado State University (CSU) meteorologists also predict stormy weather. In a revised forecast released Wednesday, they speculate that this could be the busiest season on record, with 24 named storms and a total of 12 hurricanes, five of which they predict will be major, meaning sustained winds of more than 179 kilometers per hour. 

Thus far this season is on track to surpass 2005, when 15 hurricanes formed causing an estimated 3,912 deaths and approximately US $171.7 billion in damage. Thus far, the number of storms formed is the most ever recorded since the satellite era began in 1966, the NOAA says.

“As is the case with all hurricane seasons, coastal residents are reminded that it only takes one hurricane making landfall to make it an active season for them,” write the CSU forecast’s authors. “They should prepare the same for every season, regardless of how much activity is predicted.”

The Atlantic hurricane season officially ends on November 30.

Source: The Washington Post (en)

Officials issue shark warning to bathers in Los Cabos

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A shark got away with a piece of a fisherman's catch in Los Cabos.
A shark got away with a piece of a fisherman's catch in Los Cabos.

People — bathers in particular — should keep an eye out for sharks in Los Cabos, warns the director of the local office of the Civil Protection agency.

Erick Santillán said fishermen have reported seeing sharks off La Ribera, La Playa and Chileno and advised that with the decline of human activity on the area’s beaches, marine life has broadened its natural habitat.

After a shark stole part of a fisherman’s catch, officials in the community of La Playa near San Jos del Cabo decided to close the beach to fishermen and bathers for several hours on Saturday.

Officials were alerted to the possible presence of a shark inside the community’s marina at Puerto Los Cabos after a man fishing from shore reported that a shark ate nearly half of a fish he had hooked. 

The beach was reopened the following day. 

A scuba diver filmed a school of eight whitetip reef sharks, which are small and not normally aggressive toward humans, some 50 meters off the coast of El Chileno beach in Los Cabos earlier this week, but the beach was not closed. 

The whitetip reef shark has seen its numbers dwindle as it is killed for its fins which are used in soup and oil which is valued for medicinal properties. 

In late June, the beach at La Ribera in Los Cabos was closed for two days after a drone filmed of a two-meter-long shark swimming in shallow waters just off the beach. 

Carlos Narro of the state fisheries association Asupesca explained that after several months without humans, the population of various marine species has grown significantly which in turn attracts sharks. He urged bathers to exercise caution when entering the sea. 

The only known shark attacks in Los Cabos occurred when a surfer had his foot bitten in 2005 at San Luis beach, and when a cat-sized shark bit a man’s toe in 2008.

Source: Milenio (sp), BCS Noticias (sp), Metropolimx (sp)

Nuevo León’s sociable bear captured, released in mountains

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The bear found snoozing outside a home in San Pedro Garza.
The bear found snoozing outside a home in San Pedro Garza.

When a famously people-curious black bear in San Pedro Garza García, Nuevo León, decided to take a nap on someone’s front porch Wednesday, his days of socializing with his human neighbors came to an end.

Authorities seized the opportunity to capture the bear with the intention of releasing it in a less populated area of the eastern Sierra Madre.

The bear, identifiable by a tag in its ear, has had at least two recent interactions with humans in Chipinque Park, part of the larger Cumbres de Monterrey National Park, including one where the bear stood on its hind legs to sniff a woman’s hair as she snapped a selfie, going against park recommendations for proper behavior during a bear encounter. 

“This type of approach by the black bear to the visitor is abnormal behavior caused by human beings,” said representatives from the park in a statement after footage of the incident appeared on social media. “The interaction shown in the video should have been avoided; what is recommended is to move away when detecting the presence of the bear and not approach.”

Encounters with bears are not unusual in the park, but this kind of fearless curiosity with humans is, and it puts both the bear and the people it interacts with at risk.

This particular bear, a young male who park authorities had captured and released at least twice before, learned from his mother that humans can be a source of food and could no longer be allowed in proximity to population centers. 

“The natural behavior of a bear toward people is always to run away. What we have seen in the videos is what we call totally aberrant behavior; it is no longer a natural behavior of a bear and can lead to aggressive behavior and pose a risk to the safety of people,” said Rogelio Carrera Treviño, coordinator of the wildlife laboratory at the Faculty of Veterinary Medicine and Animal Husbandry at the Autonomous University of Nuevo León.

In the United States, bears that exhibit this level of familiarity with people are often euthanized, but Mexican black bears are an endangered species and thus protected by law.

The bear was captured with the support of Civil Protection and Parks and Wildlife personnel, who tranquilized him while he slept outside the door of a home. 

Although authorities originally planned to send him to a zoo or wildlife center due to his all-too-sociable behavior, an outcry on social media triggered the decision to release him in a remote area of the mountains.

Source: La Silla Rota (sp)

Interjet, Aeromar sign codesharing agreement

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interjet and aeromar

Mexican airlines Interjet and Aeromar, both struggling to rebound from losses suffered due to the coronavirus pandemic, announced Wednesday that they have signed a codeshare agreement, allow them to market routes jointly.

Interjet will now sell Aeromar tickets on flights from Mexico City to Acapulco, Oaxaca, Puerto Escondido, San Luis Potosí, Veracruz, Zihuatanejo, and Guadalajara-Puerto Vallarta. 

Meanwhile, Aeromar will sell Interjet flights from Mexico City to Chetumal, Guadalajara, Mérida, Monterrey, Puerto Vallarta, Tijuana and Villahermosa.

“The scope of the agreement is expected to be expanded in the short term, to cover the entire route network of both airlines,” Interjet said in a statement.

The signing of the agreement occurs at a time when domestic air travel in Mexico is expected to begin to recover, and the alliance comes at an important time for Interjet, which has suffered staggering losses due to financial issues that were only compounded by the coronavirus lockdown.

Interjet lost 90% of its fleet after 25 leased aircraft were repossessed by creditors in recent months. The company stopped flying internationally and has just five planes servicing its 10 remaining routes.

But things could be looking up for the embattled carrier, the third largest in Mexico, which has been teetering on the verge of bankruptcy for months, as it recently announced a US $150 million capital injection from investors Alejandro del Valle and Carlos Cabal Peniche.

Aeromar, Mexico’s oldest domestic airline, had been financially troubled for several years before it began to turn a profit again in 2019. The airline plans to open six new routes in the course of 2020, and hopes to recover 100% of its operations by December 2021. 

The alliance marks the first time Mexican domestic airlines have entered into a codeshare agreement.

Source: MSN (sp), Simple Flying (en)

Private schools may get help as students move to public system

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empty classroom
Though schools in Culiacán and many other areas of Sinaloa reopened last week, few parents allowed their children to attend. (File photo)

President López Obrador announced Wednesday that his government will look at ways to support private schools that are seeing a substantial drop in enrollment due to the economic crisis generated by the coronavirus. 

The president acknowledged that the health crisis is expected to result in many private school students migrating to public schools, leaving the private institutions in a precarious financial position. 

“The decrease in enrollment will lead to more demand in public schools. We have to resolve the situation so that they do not close and look for ways to help to continue guaranteeing the right to education,” the president said. “We are not going to abandon the education and health of the people; we have to find a way to solve the demand for education.”

He did not specify what measures would be taken to keep private schools afloat but Education Minister Esteban Moctezuma Barragán will give an update on the educational system each day at 5 p.m.

The National Confederation of Private Schools (CNEP) had asked to establish a dialogue with the federal government to address their needs and discuss the possibility of relaxing or forgiving payroll and property taxes. Whether those measures will be a part of the prospective government aid plan remains to be seen.

“Due to the crisis, we already know that there are families that will not be able to keep their children in private schools and there are private schools that are already reporting that they will not have enough students,” the president said earlier this week. “No one will be left without the right to education and to the best of our ability we will also help these private schools. We have to do it because it is about education.”

According to data from the CNEP and the National Association for Educational Promotion, as of the end of July 30% of the students who attended private schools last year had not re-enrolled, putting 25% of private schools at risk of closing.

It is estimated that 5.3 million students attend private schools that employ 485,188 teachers. The country has 200,000 public schools and 1.2 million teachers, Moctezuma said.

Public schools are set to reopen on August 24 but classes will be broadcast on television, radio and via the internet as part of the SEP’s “Learn at Home II” program. In-person classes will resume once the government’s coronavirus stoplight map shows a state has moved to a green, low-risk level. 

Source: Infobae (sp), La Jornada (sp), Milenio (sp), El Heraldo de México (sp)

In 7 states Covid-19 is on the rise; López-Gatell repeats call to use face masks

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Inmates make face masks at a prison in Mexico City.
Inmates make face masks at a prison in Mexico City.

New coronavirus case numbers are on the rise in seven states, a senior Health Ministry official said Wednesday as total cases across Mexico passed 450,000.

Director of Epidemiology José Luis Alomía told the nightly coronavirus press briefing that the epidemics in Baja California Sur, Colima, Guanajuato, Hidalgo, Nayarit, Yucatán and Zacatecas are still in a growth phase.

He noted that Baja California Sur’s Covid-19 positivity rate  – the percentage of tests that come back positive – has increased to 50% in recent weeks from about 35% previously.

A higher positivity rate is an indication of wider spread of the virus in the community. Baja California Sur currently has an estimated 1,098 active cases, a figure that accounts for 21% of total estimated cases.

At the national level, only 9% of total cases are estimated to be active.

Total, accumulated coronavirus cases as of Wednesday.
Total, accumulated coronavirus cases as of Wednesday. milenio

Alomía said that case numbers have recently spiked 7% in Colima, noting that the total number of estimated cases in the small Pacific coast state is 2,224.

Just over 20% of confirmed cases in Colima – 453 – are estimated to be active.

In Guanajuato, Salamanca, Silao and León are among the municipalities where case numbers are on the rise, Alomía said.

León, the state’s largest city, currently has the third largest active outbreak in Mexico, with 997 cases.

Only Mérida, Yucatán, and Centro (Villahermosa), Tabasco, currently have more active cases, according to federal data.

In Hidalgo, 871 of 7,628 cases, or 11%, are estimated to be active, 2% higher than the national percentage, while 13% of cases are estimated to be active in Nayarit.

Estimated active Covid-19 cases.
Estimated active Covid-19 cases. milenio

More than half of Nayarit’s 3,677 confirmed cases were detected in Tepic, the state capital.

Yucatán currently has 1,907 active cases, with the highest numbers in Mérida and Valladolid. The active case numbers account for 17% of total estimated cases in the state.

In Zacatecas, 664 of 3,188 estimated cases are active, meaning that 21% of total cases were diagnosed among people who first developed coronavirus symptoms in the past 14 days. Zacatecas, Guadalupe and Fresnillo are among the municipalities where new case numbers are on the rise.

Mexico’s overall case tally rose to 456,100 on Wednesday with 6,139 new cases registered by health authorities. The official Covid-19 death toll increased to 49,698 with 829 additional fatalities registered.

Based on confirmed cases and deaths, Mexico’s fatality rate is currently 10.9, well above the global rate of 3.8.

Mexico has recorded 39.4 Covid-19 deaths per 100,000 inhabitants, the 13th highest rate in the world, according to Johns Hopkins University data.

With coronavirus case numbers and deaths continuing to show steady growth, Deputy Health Minister Hugo López-Gatell renewed his call for people to wear face masks, especially in enclosed spaces.

“If they are used in a massive way, we will be able to interfere with the release of the virus from the respiratory tract of the nose and mouth of those people who with symptoms or without symptoms … could be spreading the virus.”

Source: Reforma (sp) 

Home-hospice built around expat in Chiapas is seed planted for the future

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Michael Luten is spending his final days in Mexico.
Michael Luten is spending his final days in Mexico.

“What can happen with this bed when I’m done?” Michael asked. He referred to his hospital bed, in the home of his friend and nurse, Becca.

Here, in San Cristóbal de las Casas, Chiapas, 71-year-old American expat Michael Luten is living his last few months in peace and hard-fought comfort, with friends, caregivers, and an unwelcome but accepted stage 4 cancer.

Spending his final days in Mexico wasn’t planned. It evolved organically as Covid-19 wrecked his return to the U.S., his health declined rapidly, and the right people wanted to help.

Michael had been here 18 months, having chosen to spend his retirement traveling and writing after a 30-year career in medical transcription. After some time in southern Mexico, he settled in San Cris. “It had the right feeling. I connected with people,” he said.  He made several friends, some who would become a deeper part of his story.

As a 10-year cancer survivor, Michael regularly returned to the VA Hospital in El Paso, Texas, for cancer management. His February visit brought startling, yet one-day-expected news. “They found lesions on my lungs.” Michael returned to San Cris, the place he loved, and would return to Texas for care when needed.

By April, cancer had spread through his foot, and Covid-19 had dramatically changed travel. “My wheelchair assistance flights were canceled three times, and my caregiver friend I planned to stay with got pneumonia.” Meanwhile, his health worsened.

He asked Becca Titus, an American RN who had become a dear friend, to drive him to the New Mexico border, where another friend would meet them. Eager to support, she considered the physical care required on the journey. Michael became worried about the Covid exposure this trip would risk for those helping. Becca’s nurse-heart compelled her to attempt a different solution.

Having lived in San Cris on and off for five years, Becca had made friends through expats and locals having gravitated toward others in the healthcare world. She met Shoshana, an American RN with 25 years’ hospice experience. Shoshana knew Karin, a Swiss former palliative care nurse now doing massage therapy.

Together, the three discussed meeting Michael’s needs and decided to go for it. “We had a video ‘intervention’ to convince Michael to stay here where we could care for him, learn from his positive and peaceful resolve, and help with his passing. Providence did the rest!” Becca said.

They recruited others and now provide 24-7 care from Becca’s home. “It’s specialized work,” she says. “Karin’s massage helps Michael’s moods and appetite, so she’s teaching us. Nurse Rocio’s Mayan tinctures diminished his leg cramps. Shoshana’s hospice experience invaluably helps navigate the end-of-life stages and family and caregiver emotions.” Kino, Michael’s friend, grew into a skilled caretaker within weeks.

“It’s amazing how we’ve all been put in each other’s paths. Michael has a magnetism that has drawn people together.”

Michael’s physical condition has deteriorated, but his mind remains sharp.  His ever-present humor comes out in frequent jokes, poking fun at himself and the world. He drives lively conversation about old movies, music, and U.S. politics. To engage in Michael’s passionate discussions, Kino began watching U.S. news and now laughs along with Michael’s wish “to live just long enough to see the orange-faced monster [Donald Trump] lose.”

In Chiapas, there isn’t hospice. Family tends to care for family, driven by culture and economics. “While dying at home is preferred, nursing homes and hospice care are also rare due to lack of funds,” says Kino. Given his new experience, he feels end-of-life care in Mexico could be easier. “Families improvise, which is difficult. We don’t need locations. We need training.”

Hospice also requires acceptance of death, which families can be reluctant to discuss. “Care focuses on keeping the person alive, rather than on comfortably passing,” Shoshana says. Still, locals knowing her background reach out for advice. “Though hospice services are not in high demand, there is need. For expats, it would be wonderful to get the end-of-life care wanted, without having to leave.”

That’s why Michael’s care coming together is so special. With no established path, they created it. Numerous challenges required improvisation and community support. For instance, Covid rendered oxygen equipment scarce, but a month of persistent phone calls from Tatiana, a local friend, finally produced a rental oxygen concentrator.

Arranging for a swift and natural burial, required for Michael as a Baha’i devotee, also proved difficult in a place where formal burial is the norm. Finally, a friend’s mortician agreed to honor his wishes.

Overall, the most critical challenge has been pain medication. Though morphine is commonly used for palliative care in the U.S. and elsewhere, it’s nearly impossible to get in Mexico. “Doctors avoid prescribing opioids, for fear of causing death or shortening life,” Karin explained.

Tatiana’s persistence again came through, Becca explained. “Through a network of friends and tireless, discerning calls to rule out fraudulent suppliers, she made a trusting relationship with one of two local doctors who dispense morphine.”

Obviously, this level of highly skilled home care requires funds. Though Michael’s American-saved dollars enable this, it was never the plan. Michael tried hard to return to the U.S., and though it didn’t work out, he’s happy with the outcome.

There, Covid protocols would have made hospice a lonely, quarantined existence. The savings that would have paid the U.S. facility instead go to a community of talented and warm expats and local people. They enjoy the work, and Michael is an easy patient who participates in his care. The difficulty will instead come after he’s gone.

While Michael has long owned that he’s dying, the relationships with his caregivers deepen every day. For Kino, the hardest part of this work is caring for someone who will not get better. Though saddened, he says, “Michael has a lot to teach others in how he’s confronted his mortality. I asked how he considered his life. He answered plainly — ‘I’m a lucky guy.’”

Reflecting gratefully on all they had done, Michael asked, “What can happen with this bed when I’m done?” His epiphany came. The bed, and everything and everyone that goes with it, should help someone else. This type of end-of-life care can be available for others like him.

He plans to leave the medical equipment and supplies for future use, as well as financial support. Though exhausted, he has dedicated energy to getting this story told. “I want to sustain their ability to continue. People should know this is an option. It would be a shame to lose what we learned. I was the catalyst for something, and I want to leave this behind.”

Michael proclaims this with conviction. He’s proud of his team’s work and believes it can serve others. He wants this as his legacy.