A BUDDING SISTER-CITY RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN DECATUR, GA., AND TRUJILLO, PERU, SHOULD GENERATE COMMERCIAL DEVELOPMENT IN BOTH LOCATIONS, ACCORDING TO THEIR RESPECTIVE CITY OFFICIALS. THERE IS AN ENORMOUS POTENTIAL FOR SHARING RESOURCES, SAID DECATUR MAYOR MICHAEL MEARS. THE MAYOR LED A DELEGATION TO TRUJILLO ON THE HEELS OF A VISIT TO DECATUR BY TRUJILLO'S MAYOR, JOSE MURGIA, A GRADUATE OF GEORGIA TECH, WHO HAD NOT VISITED ATLANTA FOR 30 YEARS. WHILE IN DEKALB COUNTY, THE PERUVIAN DELEGATION VISITED WITH THE HEADS OF A VARIETY OF BUSINESS, EDUCATIONAL AND CULTURAL ORGANIZATIONS. THE DEKALB DELEGATION WAS TREATED TO A SIMILAR ARRAY OF VISITS IN TRUJILLO, WHICH, WITH A POPULATION OF 650,000 PEOPLE, IS THE SECOND LARGEST CITY IN PERU. RAY KEMPER, AN INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT OFFICER WITH DEKALB COUNTY'S CHAMBER OF COMMERCE, SAID THAT THERE IS A STRONG NETWORK OF OFFICIALS, LOCAL CHAMBERS AND VARIOUS OTHER ORGANIZATIONS IN TRUJILLO TO EXPORT FRESH VEGETABLES. MR. KEMPER ALSO CITED OTHER BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES IN TRUJILLO INCLUDING PUBLISHING AND CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS.