December 7, 2007

   
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BUY ¢496.18 SELL ¢502.18

Books Abound: Cookbook “ Comidas a la Tica ”, Orlando Sandy, is among the titles on display through Sunday at the Christmas Book Fair on Ave. 4, behind the Social Security System (Caja) building in San José.

Harmony Reforma | Tico Times.
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Caribbean Vibes: An Afro-Costa Rican woman at last year's Carnival celebration in Limón, where this weekend a festival highlights Caribbean culture.

Mónica Quesada | Tico Times.

Limón Festival Puts Afro-Costa Rican Heritage First

“Reaffirming our Afro-Costa Rican identity” is the motto for a festival set today and tomorrow in the towns of Siquirres and Limón, on the Caribbean coast, giving center stage to the culture of residents whose ancestors migrated from the West Indies, mostly in the 19 th century.
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Development Bank Approves up to
$381 Million Loan to Refinance ICE's Debt

The Costa Rican Electricity Institute (ICE) could see a rise in cash flow for investments in infrastructure, thanks to a loan approved this week by the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB).
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CAFTA Bill Passed in First Vote

Legislators moved to crack down on bribery and corruption late Wednesday, approving the second of 11 bills required to implement the Central American Free-Trade Agreement with the United States (CAFTA).

Construction Permit Process Cut to Two Days in Pilot Program

Getting a construction permit for a house will take only two days if a pilot program just starting up in Curridabat, east of San José, spreads to the other municipalities.

Casa 76: A Home Turned
Restaurant in Santa Ana

Santa Ana is becoming a growing boomtown with shopping malls, fast-food eat-eries and swanky restaurants galore. However, this erstwhile farming town southwest of the capital still has neighborhoods that have not been invaded by the never-ending development.

 


Limón Festival Puts Afro-Costa Rican Heritage First

“Reaffirming our Afro-Costa Rican identity” is the motto for a festival set today and tomorrow in the towns of Siquirres and Limón, on the Caribbean coast, giving center stage to the culture of residents whose ancestors migrated from the West Indies, mostly in the 19 th century.

Costa Rica pays precious little attention to its inhabitants of African dissent, say activist groups such as the Afro-Costa Rican Women's Center, based in San José.

The country's Afro-Costa Rican population is about 3% of the population.

But for Karla Samuels, a vocal member of the women's group, the community is virtually “invisible” in Costa Rican society's eyes.

The festival, organized by the Culture and Youth Ministry, is an initiative to raise public awareness of the community, as an additional program to the traditional Black and Afro-Costa Rican Culture Day on Aug. 31.

It kicks off at 2 p.m. at the vocational school gymnasium, in Siquirres, with a children's story, Tía Luísa (Aunt Luísa). Then at 6 p.m., revelers will get a taste of what spicy rhythms and melodies the local musicians can cook up.

The program repeats tomorrow in Limón, starting at 2 p.m., at the Black Star Line.

However, it is not merely Afro-Caribbean culture that needs a sharper focus, Afro-Costa Rican rights advocates say, but also the marginalization they've suffered here.

For a close-up look at how some Afro-Costa Rican women feel about being the “invisible” visible minority, see Suzanna Starcevic's special report in the Weekend section of today's print or electronic edition of The Tico Times.

-Tico Times


Development Bank Approves up to
$381 Million Loan to Refinance ICE's Debt

The Costa Rican Electricity Institute (ICE) could see a rise in cash flow for investments in infrastructure, thanks to a loan approved this week by the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB).

The bank will make a $381 million loan, meant to refinance part of the debt that has burdened the national power and telecom institution.

“The new financing will help ICE free up cash currently used for debt service and devote more resources to investments in infrastructure to continue improving service quality and coverage," said IDB project team leader Javier Molina in a statement from the bank. "It will also assist ICE in meeting working capital requirements to grow its operations."

-Tico Times


CAFTA Bill Passed in First Vote

By Gillian Gillers
Tico Times Staff | ggillers@ticotimes.net

Legislators moved to crack down on bribery and corruption late Wednesday, approving the second of 11 bills required to implement the Central American Free-Trade Agreement with the United States (CAFTA).

Under the bill, companies that engage in corruption would be shut down for up to five years, and their concession would be canceled. People who bribe public officials, as well as officials who accept bribes, would go to jail for two to eight years.

The bill was approved unanimously in one of the assembly's three 19-member committees that have the power to pass laws. Two legislators from the anti-CAFTA Citizen Action Party (PAC), voted for the bill, which cannot become law until it is approved in a second vote and signed by President Oscar Arias.

Legislators have been working long hours – sometimes meeting until 11 p.m. – to discuss the bills required to implement CAFTA. If they do not pass these bills before Feb. 29, Costa Rica must ask for an extension from the treaty's other signers.

The first CAFTA bill legislators passed will regulate the relationship between foreign firms and their representatives in the United States.


Construction Permit Process
Cut to Two Days in Pilot Program

Getting a construction permit for a house will take only two days if a pilot program just starting up in Curridabat, east of San José, spreads to the other municipalities.

The process can take between 26 and 45 days and cost hundreds of dollars.

That will be reduced significantly thanks to the Internet: The municipality will be putting all the application forms for construction permits online, through a system managed by the Federated Association of Engineers and Architects (CFIA).

“Through the CFIA system, the professional will do the whole process … from any part of the country or the world,” CFIA President Jorge Badilla said in a statement.

The project is only in its pilot stage, meaning it only applies to the municipality of Curridabat and only to small and medium houses.

The CFIA estimated that if the same system had been applied during 2007, it would have saved the municipality about $16,000.

The pilot program was launched with the collaboration of the National Program for Competitiveness and Regulator Improvement, headed up by new Minister of Competitiveness Jorge Woodbridge.

-Tico Times


Casa 76: A Home Turned Restaurant in Santa Ana

Santa Ana is becoming a growing boomtown with shopping malls, fast-food eat-eries and swanky restaurants galore. However, this erstwhile farming town southwest of the capital still has neighborhoods that have not been invaded by the never-ending development.

San Rafael de Santa Ana is one of these, and it is here that you will find Casa 76. Owner Gilda Sancho has converted her home of 20 years into a delightful restaurant surrounded by a colorful tropical garden, offering tranquil dining away from the bustling center of town.

Casa 76: The Santa Ana home of Gilda Sancho has been converted into a restaurant surrounded by a tropical garden.
Ronald Reyes | Tico Times

The restaurant specializes in pasta and pizzas, but also offers choices for those who prefer a “less Italianized” menu, Sancho says. Full of energy and enthusiasm about her recently opened venture, the charming Sancho is the owner of the original Casa 76 in Ciudad Colón, farther west along the valley. Her son runs the Ciudad Colón restaurant, while she concentrates on the new location.

“It's nice to be operating out of my own home,” she says.

The large house is built of a mixture of wood and every imaginable construction material.

“It's like a patchwork quilt,” Sancho says. The only new additions she has made are a large modern kitchen, bathrooms and an enlarged parking area.

Casa 76 calzone.
Ronald Reyes | Tico Times

The first thing you notice is the white wooden facade with its large, shuttered windows. Alfresco dining on the spacious veranda is a pleasant alternative to the interior dining room, where family dining tables and a large, open fireplace add to the friendly feeling of a private home.

Once the rainy season is over, Sancho says, the garden will be lit to offer attractive seating among the shrubbery.

I've visited Casa 76 twice and really enjoyed the ambience and food. I've since recommended it to friends who agree with me, and were happy with the friendly service and atmosphere.

For starters, the menu offers salads that I'm told are enormous and delicious, but should be ordered to share, or as a main course. Hot and cold appetizers include the usual Italian antipasto plates, salmon and beef carpaccio, mussels and soups. Prices, not including tax and service, range from ¢2,000 to ¢4,500 ($3.80-8.60).

Fettucine puttanesca.
Ronald Reyes | Tico Times

Twenty-two varieties of pizza boggle the mind, and calzones, stuffed oven-baked pizza turnovers, come with three different fillings. I tried the Casa 76, which was generously stuffed with ham, salami, mushrooms and bacon. My only complaint was that the bacon was undercooked for my liking. I have heard enthusiastic reviews of the Calzone Especial with ham, mushrooms and blue cheese. Prices for calzones and pizzas – which come in small, medium and large – range from ¢3,150 to ¢6,900 ($6-13).

Pasta lovers have 11 choices offering an interesting variety, and not one complaint have I heard. The fettucine puttanesca, a great favorite of mine, was delicious, as was the alfredo and del mar with a variety of seafood. A vegan guest ordered the simple spaghetti pomodoro and thoroughly enjoyed it, while the lasagnas and raviolis were all deemed excellent.

I've yet to try the pizza, but the talents of chef Jovanni Ramírez, when it comes to pasta and sauces, are certainly worthy of praise. The menu also offers chicken, steak and fish dishes (¢5,250-6,500/$10-12). The former two were fine, but the salmon was excessively salty, and a disappointed diner ate only a few mouthfuls.

The three desserts, panna cotta, ice cream and the traditional tres leches, all ¢1,500 ($2.90), remained unsampled by my crew. Perhaps the generous portions of pasta and pizza defeated even the heartiest appetites.

Casa 76 has no liquor license, but you are welcome to bring your own, and there is no corkage fee. However, the fresh fruit drinks served in individual jugs are delicious and will sate anybody's thirst.

 
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