Administration and society

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Also known as: Nuestra Señora Santa María del Buen Aire

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Government

Since 1996 the city government has been headed by a directly elected mayor and city council; however, the legislative and executive powers of the mayor and the council are limited, largely because of the centralizing tendency of the federal government, which wields considerable influence over local affairs. By law, the president of the republic is responsible for governing the municipality of Buenos Aires, and the National Congress is ultimately responsible for legislation pertaining to it. Moreover, before 1996 the city council functioned only intermittently, and in times of military rule the actual governing of the city often has been assumed directly by the junta in power. The city was historically divided into administrative units, some of which coincided approximately with the traditional neighbourhoods. Each unit had a neighbourhood council, which dealt with local issues. In 2007 a political decentralization program began, which was designed to amalgamate the existing neighbourhoods into comunas (communes), each to be governed by a seven-person citizens’ committee.

Administrative units of the Buenos Aires metropolitan region are called partidos (counties); each county is governed by an elected mayor and a municipal council. Coordinated governance of the Buenos Aires metropolitan region is complicated by the lack of any interjurisdictional governing body. The National Commission of the Buenos Aires Metropolitan Area was set up by the federal government in the late 1980s to harmonize the separate administrations of the central city, Buenos Aires province, and the counties. Its efforts have been largely ineffectual.

Municipal services

Since the adoption of privatization policies in 1992, almost all public services have been turned over to private national and multinational companies, with limited oversight by federal government agencies. The municipal government is in charge of only the construction and maintenance of pavements, sidewalks, and parks. Because of population growth and uncontrolled building, public services have been severely strained. Another exception, sanitary facilities—water supply, drainage, and sewers—are the responsibility of the National Sanitary Works Agency (Dirección Nacional de Obras Sanitarias de la Nación; OSN), which services a major part of Greater Buenos Aires. OSN was privatized in 1993; after years of political struggles over tariffs, environmental concerns, and infrastructure investments, it returned to state ownership in 2006.

The waste-disposal system includes garbage-burning centres, but most wastes are used to fill lowlands along the Río de la Plata. Reclaimed areas have been converted into parks, sports areas, and construction sites. The large water-purification plant in Palermo Park treats water from the Río de la Plata and sends it underground through tunnels to reservoirs in different parts of the city. Electricity is provided by the Northern Electrical Distribution Company (EDENOR) in the northern half of Buenos Aires and by the Southern Electrical Distribution Company (EDESUR) in the southern part. Telephone service has improved dramatically since the turn of the 21st century, and cellular phones are now ubiquitous in the wealthier neighbourhoods. Most long-distance calls are still made from neighbourhood phone centres, however. Natural gas is distributed in the Federal District by Metrogas from oil fields in the interior of the country. The city consumes more than half of all the electric and natural gas energy produced in Argentina.

Health

The city has municipal and private hospitals, as well as numerous neighbourhood dispensaries, pharmacies, and clinics. A relatively high number of hospital beds are maintained in order to accommodate the many patients from other parts of Argentina who travel to Buenos Aires for specialized treatment.

Education

Argentinians are among the most literate people in the world, and porteños have access to the country’s finest educational facilities. The primary and secondary schools are based on the neighbourhood system, and the government runs special national high schools as college preparatory schools. Students in those high schools and others, including numerous schools administered by the Roman Catholic Church or by other religious bodies, aim for entrance into the University of Buenos Aires (1821). Despite the repressive years of military dictatorship, this institution has continued to produce outstanding students and teachers, including Nobel Prize winners. The political difficulties suffered by the University of Buenos Aires have encouraged the foundation of several private universities, the most prominent of which is the University of Belgrano (1964). In addition, the city is the site of the University of Morón (1960), and there are two major universities run by the Roman Catholic Church—the Pontifical Catholic University of Argentina (1958) and the University of the Saviour (1956).

Cultural life

Daily life in Buenos Aires typically revolves around the local neighbourhood, the city centre, and the major recreation and entertainment areas, such as the theatre district near Calle Lavalle. Since the 1980s, North American influences in fast food, fashion, and music have played a dominant role in shaping the city’s cultural landscape as well. Porteños tend to have a high tolerance for working long days and having even longer nights. Most offices close at 6 pm, while stores stay open well into the evening. Lunch breaks may extend over several hours, and the traditional siesta is not uncommon. Around midnight, the city’s restaurants overflow with customers seeking an evening meal, especially on the weekends. Cosmopolitan cuisine, especially French and Italian cooking, dominates the dining habits of porteños, but parrilla (“grill”) restaurants remain hugely popular and serve enormous quantities of grilled meats.

Cultural life in the capital has been peculiarly vulnerable to political change. Military governments, wary of artistic expression, tended to be more restrictive than democratic governments. Newspapers particularly struggled for free expression during periods of military dominance. Buenos Aires, one of the major publishing centres of Latin America, has a wide variety of newspapers, including several in foreign languages. At least two dailies, La Prensa (“The Press”) and La Nación (“The Nation”), are internationally known. Porteños are avid readers, and bookstores are prevalent in the city.