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24-695: (Redirected from Candelária ) Candelaria or Candelária may refer to: People [ edit ] Jacob Candelaria (born 1987), American politician and attorney John Candelaria (born 1953), American baseball pitcher Luis Candelaria (1892–1963), Argentine military aviator, who completed the first air crossing of the Andes in 1918 Nash Candelaria (1928–2016), American author Richard G. Candelaria (born 1922), American WWII fighter ace Places [ edit ] Argentina [ edit ] Candelaria, Misiones , Misiones Province Candelaria, San Luis ,

48-486: A 102-page long senior thesis, titled "Contemporary Venezuelan Oil Policy: An Institutional Analysis", under the supervision of Stanley Katz . At Princeton, Candelaria was a member of The Ivy Club and St. Anthony Hall . Candelaria returned to Albuquerque after graduating from Princeton, working for Think New Mexico, the New Mexico Legislative Finance Committee and Ben Luján , the speaker of

72-470: A 1993 massacre in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Candelária Sport Clube , a roller hockey team from the civil parish of Candelária Club Atlético Candelaria , an Argentine football club from Misiones Province See also [ edit ] Candelario (disambiguation) La Candelaria (disambiguation) Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with

96-597: A Tren Maya station Candelaria Loxicha Candelaria metro station , a station on the Mexico City Metro Philippines [ edit ] Candelaria, Quezon Candelaria station (PNR) , a railway station that is part of the PNR South Long Haul project Candelaria, Zambales Portugal [ edit ] Candelária (Madalena) , a civil parish in the municipality of Madalena, island of Pico, Azores Candelária (Ponta Delgada) ,

120-408: A civil parish in the municipality of Ponta Delgada, island of São Miguel, Azores Puerto Rico [ edit ] Mayagüez, Puerto Rico , founded as Nuestra Señora de la Candelaria Candelaria, Lajas, Puerto Rico , a barrio Candelaria, Toa Baja, Puerto Rico , a barrio Candelaria, Vega Alta, Puerto Rico , a barrio Spain [ edit ] Candelaria, Tenerife , a municipality in

144-536: A historic neighborhood in Bogotá Cuba [ edit ] Candelaria, Cuba , Artemisa Province El Salvador [ edit ] Candelaria, Cuscatlán Candelaria de la Frontera Guatemala [ edit ] Candelaria Caves , a natural cave system in the municipalities of Chisec and Raxruha Honduras [ edit ] Candelaria, Lempira Mexico [ edit ] Candelaria Municipality , Campeche Candelaria railway station ,

168-820: A village and municipality in San Luis Province La Candelaria, Catamarca , a village and municipality in Catamarca Province La Candelaria, Salta , a village and rural municipality in Salta Province Brazil [ edit ] Candelária Church , a historical church in Rio de Janeiro Candelária, Rio Grande do Sul Chile [ edit ] Candelaria mine , a copper deposit in Atacama Region Colombia [ edit ] Candelaria, Valle del Cauca Candelaria, Atlántico La Candelaria, Bogotá ,

192-455: Is a civil parish located on the western coast of the island of Pico , in the municipality of Madalena in the Azores . The population in 2011 was 822, in an area of 29.70 km . It contains the localities Biscoitos, Campo Raso, Candelária, Canada das Adegas, Canada Negra, Canto, Eira, Fogos, Guindaste, Mirateca, Monte, Pedras, Pocinho, Porto de Ana Clara, Porto do Calhau and São Nuno. This

216-504: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Jacob Candelaria Jacob Rodney Candelaria (born 1987) is an American politician and attorney who served as a member of the New Mexico Senate for the 26th district from 2013 to 2022. First elected in 2012 as a Democrat, he later left the party in 2021 to become an independent. On December 6, 2021, Candelaria announced that he

240-469: Is the last U.S. State with a volunteer Legislature. Members receive a per-diem for days they are in session or attending legislative interim committee meetings, but are not paid a salary or other benefits. Candelaria is openly gay . He is the first gay man to serve in the New Mexico Legislature and only the second LGBT person, after state Senator Liz Stefanics . Candelaria's campaign won

264-742: The New Mexico House of Representatives . In August 2011, he was appointed president and CEO of Equality New Mexico, the state's largest gay rights organization. Candelaria is the owner and managing partner of his own law firm, Candelaria Law LLC., which opened in October 2019. Candelaria's law firm focuses in the areas of civil rights, workers compensation, criminal defense, cannabis law, and complex civil litigation. Candelaria Law LLC counts New Mexico Top Organics-Ultra Health LLC, New Mexico's largest vertically integrated cannabis company, among its clients. On March 5, 2012, Candelaria announced his candidacy for

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288-549: The New Mexico Senate, seeking the Democratic nomination in the 26th district. He was initially one of four Democrats to have filed for the seat, including incumbent Sen. Bernadette Sanchez . However, Sanchez abandoned her re-election bid on March 23, citing a desire to concentrate on her health. Three days later, Steve D. Gallegos, a former Albuquerque City Councilman and Bernalillo County Commissioner , dropped his bid for

312-622: The Public Service Compant of New Mexico or PNM, the state's largest investor owned utility, to issue securitized bonds to retire the utility's remaining assets in the San Juan Generating Station, a coal fire plant, and its affiliated coal mine. The law appropriates savings that result from lower interest rates on a utility's securitized bonds into three state administered funds for economic development, worker re training, and environmental remediation in communities effected by

336-627: The closure of the San Juan Generating Station. On October 24, 2020, Candelaria denounced an anti-lockdown protest held at the New Mexico Capitol Building in a television appearance. Following this, he received a number of anonymous threats via phone calls, with one including homophobic slurs and another saying that “we’re going to get you out one way or another", according to Candelaria. In response to these threats, Candelaria left his Albuquerque apartment and sought police protection. Candelaria announced on December 6, 2021, that he

360-562: The island of Tenerife, Santa Cruz de Tenerife, Canary Islands United States [ edit ] Candelaria, Texas , Presidio County Candelaria, Nevada , a mining ghost town Religion [ edit ] Fiesta de la Candelaria or Candlemas Virgin of Candelaria , an apparition of the Virgin Mary Other [ edit ] Candelaria (lichen) , a genus of yellow lichens Candelaria (reptile) , an extinct genus of owenettid parareptiles Candelária massacre ,

384-408: The parish is basically a pie-shaped wedge, with 8.6 kilometres (5.3 mi) at its extreme, along the coast. Settled areas are divided equally between hedge-row-divided parcels and forested patches of land, with scrub and natural vegetation occupying higher altitudes. In addition to central Candelária (which also encompasses the communities of Biscoitos, Alto and Eira) there are smaller hamlets within

408-497: The seat and endorsed Candelaria. The Democratic primary election held on June 5, 2012, was therefore a two-way fight between Candelaria and opponent Carlos Jose Villanueva. Candelaria took 69% of the vote, winning 1,835 votes to Villanueva's 828. In 2017, Candelaria sponsored legislation to ban Gay conversion therapy in New Mexico. The legislation passed both the state House and Senate with substantial bi-partisan margins. The bill

432-648: The support of the Gay & Lesbian Victory Fund . Candelaria married his husband, a resident physician at the University of New Mexico Hospital specializing in infectious diseases, in May 2019 at a ceremony in Santa Fe officiated by Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham. Candelaria's husband is a member of the Tillery family of New Mexico car dealers. Candel%C3%A1ria (Madalena) Candelária

456-505: The title Candelaria . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Candelaria&oldid=1241995613 " Categories : Disambiguation pages Place name disambiguation pages Disambiguation pages with given-name-holder lists Disambiguation pages with surname-holder lists Genus disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description

480-572: The use of the Gay Panic Defense in criminal cases in the state. Candelaria retired from the Senate on October 19, 2022. In his retirement letter to Maggie Toulouse Oliver, the New Mexico Secretary of State, Candelaria said that he could no longer balance the demands of his private law practice, and a desire to start a family with his husband, with volunteer service in the Senate. New Mexico

504-632: Was changing his party affiliation from "Democrat" to " Decline to State ". Candelaria was the first openly gay man elected to the New Mexico Legislature. Candelaria was born in Albuquerque, and brought up by his grandmother Elodia Gloria Candelaria. Candelaria attended St. Pius X High School , and went on to earn an A.B. from the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University in 2009 after completing

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528-460: Was switching his party affiliation from "Democrat" to "Decline to State" following dissatisfaction with the "extreme partisanship" of the Democratic controlled redistricting process in New Mexico. During the 2022 regular session of the New Mexico Legislature, Candelaria successfully added an amendment to a piece of omnibus criminal justice reform legislation passed that year and later signed into law by Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham which prohibits

552-495: Was the birthplace of the late cardinal José da Costa Nunes . Linked by the Regional E.R.1-1ª roadway to the parishes of Criação Velha (to the north) and São Caetano (to the southeast), the parish is primarily a coastal agricultural community. From the coast, for about 2 kilometres (1.2 mi), the parish comprises cultivatable lands and settlements, which starts sloping into higher altitudes, reaching its extreme at Ponta do Pico;

576-431: Was ultimately signed into law by Republican Governor Susana Martinez . Candelaria was the lead sponsor and chief legislative architect of the 2019 New Mexico Energy Transition Act. The ETA amended New Mexico's renewable energy portfolio standards to require that all investor owned utilities and rural electric collaboratives transition to one-hundred percent renewable electricity generation by 2045. The ETA also authorized

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