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August 31, 2009
   
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Cutting through red tape: Illustrations of before and after Costa Rica speeds up the process for foreign professionals to apply for residency.

Courtesy of the Economy Ministry

| Previous Daily News

We did it: Teammates of the Costa Rican women's volleyball team celebrate their win Saturday over Mexico at the world championship qualification tournament in Tijuana, Mexico.

Alejandro Zepeda | EFE

Jacó region scores big with 70,000-plus
spectators at World Surfing Games
The International Surfing Association (ISA) 2009 World Surfing Games, held in Playa Hermosa and Jacó from Aug. 1-8, was officially the most attended and covered event in the history of Costa Rican sports.
Costa Rica to process residency applications
for foreign professionals more quickly
A new method for processing residency requests is expected to slice the wait time by a third and create greater fluidity in legalizing professional immigrants.
Honduras’ presidential campaigns start marred by crisis
Campaigning for Honduras' Nov. 29 presidential election is set to begin this week amid high tensions as domestic and international pressure continues to build in the Central American country, two months after the ouster of President Manuel Zelaya.
Nicaragua receives $150.7 million from IMF
Nicaragua has received $150.7 million in Special Drawing Rights from the International Monetary Fund, the Central Bank said Friday.
ABCs Plus: A Directory
of Costa Rican Siglas

Believe it or not, sometimes we speak in initials instead of words. Perhaps we are discussing a TV program about the FBI or the CIA, or we are watching an NFL or NBA game on NBC. Maybe we are worried about the IRS or our HMO.

 

Jacó region scores big with 70,000-plus
spectators at World Surfing Games

By Adam Williams
Tico Times Staff | awilliams@ticotimes.net

The International Surfing Association (ISA) 2009 World Surfing Games, held in Playa Hermosa and Jacó from Aug. 1-8, was officially the most attended and covered event in the history of Costa Rican sports.

During the eight-day tournament, more than 70,000 spectators visited Hermosa beach, on the central Pacific coast, to watch surfers from 35 different countries compete for titles in the Men's and Women's Open and longboard competitions. According to the ISA, the 70,000-plus audience was the biggest turnout ever recorded for a surfing event. 

The Jacó and Playa Hermosa region reaped the benefit of the heavy volume of tourists. Hotels, restaurants and businesses in Jacó have reported earnings of more than $2.5 million during the eight days of competition. The money made during the competition is three times more than the average sales expected from a regular tourism high season in Jacó.

More than 100 different media outlets covered the event, including more than 50 international publications, news and radio stations. Coverage of the event was offered in Spanish, English, French and Portuguese.

“Today, the country of Costa Rica, thanks to the results that transcended our expectations for the event, has shown that it is a country that surfs at the highest level and receives great support from fans across the country,” José Ureña, president of the Surf Federation of Costa Rica and coach of the national team.

Costa Rica to process residency applications
for foreign professionals more quickly
By Chrissie Long
Tico Times Staff | clong@ticotimes.net

A new method for processing residency requests is expected to slice the wait time by a third and create greater fluidity in legalizing professional immigrants.

A four-step process that takes upwards of 15 days will be cut down to two steps, requiring fewer than 10 days and allowing all paperwork to be processed over the Internet, according to a news release from the Economy Ministry.

“The initiative complements a government commitment to eliminate unnecessary and highly bureaucratic procedures and improve competitive conditions in the country,” said Jorge Woodbridge, minister for competitiveness. “(It will) benefit the climate of investment – both domestic and foreign – and ensure better opportunities and employment for Costa Ricans.”

The new digital system will be used with residency applications for scientists, technical support personnel, professionals and managers, as well as their spouses and children.

For Alejandro Rodríguez, a lawyer who processes residency applications on behalf of Sony Ericsson, the new system converts a “very difficult, very bothersome, very complicated system” into a “more efficient, more convenient” one.

“Historically, it was a challenge because Costa Rica receives many applications for residency,” he said. “Now we can submit a residency request at any time during the day … and we can file the paperwork two to three months before an employee arrives in the country.”

Approximately 58 companies have been preapproved for the digital system, with a pilot phase beginning Sept. 1.

“This new system represents improvements in care and services to users, offering a greater number of tools to facilitate and expedite immigration services throughout the country," said Mario Zamora, general director of immigration. He said the simplification promotes foreign investment and retention of transnational corporations.

Honduras’ presidential
campaigns start marred by crisis

Campaigning for Honduras' Nov. 29 presidential election is set to begin this week amid high tensions as domestic and international pressure continues to build in the Central American country, two months after the ouster of President Manuel Zelaya.

Elvin Santos and Porfirio Lobo are launching campaigns for their respective parties, the Liberal Party of Honduras and the National Party of Honduras. Despite being marred by one of the region's worst political crises in decades, the politicians said they will set forth on their campaigns with optimism.

Lobo said Sunday his government would consist of an “integration of ample participation so that all of us together can make the changes necessary to build a future with hope,” newswire EFE reported.

Santos pledged to create employment and improve participation of municipal governments to spur development in the country, one of the Americas' poorest.

Followers of Zelaya – who was elected in 2005 on the Liberal Party ticket – consider both candidates to be coup sympathizers.

The United States raised the pressure Thursday, threatening to characterize Zelaya's ouster as a coup d'etat, which effectively would suspend millions in development aid to Honduras, the Associated Press reported.

The move came after the different branches of the Honduran government rejected a Costa Rica-brokered plan for reconciliation, which gained international backing after tense negotiations in President Oscar Arias' living room. The proposed San José Agreement calls for a return of Zelaya to the presidency and amnesty for alleged political crimes committed – by Zelaya or the de facto government.

Roberto Micheletti, Honduras' de facto president, last week sent a communiqué to Arias proposing alternatives to the Costa Rican Nobel Peace Prize laureate's plan, reported Honduras' Radio América. Although details of the document were not immediately available, Micheletti has said restoring Zelaya's presidency is unacceptable, that the exiled leader should sit on trial if he returns and that Honduras should go ahead with elections slated for November.

–Wire reports
Nicaragua receives $150.7 million from IMF

Nicaragua has received $150.7 million in Special Drawing Rights from the International Monetary Fund, the Central Bank said Friday.

The bank said the money will help buffer the impact of the global financial crisis by boosting international reserves and strengthening the financial system.

Nicaragua will receive an additional $13.6 million on Sept. 9, the Central Bank said.

The money comes as part of the IMF's injection of $283 billion in Special Drawing Rights into the global economy, a decision made at the Group of 20's April summit in London, England. “The allocation is based on a long-term global need to supplement IMF members' existing reserve assets, and it provides liquidity to the global economic system,” the IMF said in a news release Friday.

–Tico Times

Please send us your letters, 500 words or fewer, to letters@ticotimes.net for Costa Rica issues or letters@nicatimes.net for Nicaragua and the Central American and Caribbean region. Thanks!

ABCs Plus: A Directory of Costa Rican Siglas

Believe it or not, sometimes we speak in initials instead of words. Perhaps we are discussing a TV program about the FBI or the CIA, or we are watching an NFL or NBA game on NBC. Maybe we are worried about the IRS or our HMO. We may also use an acronym, a word like AIDS (SIDA in Spanish), formed from the initial letters of words in a phrase. It may even have become a real word, as in “scuba,” which stands for “self-contained, underwater breathing apparatus.” Obviously, we use initials and acronyms as abbreviations in both speech and writing.

It's hard enough to learn another language without having to decipher what all the initials and acronyms – called “siglas” in Spanish – mean in that language. Of course, Costa Rica, being a socialist democracy, is replete with siglas designating government agencies.

The following is a directory in alphabetical order of some of the most important of these. Don't think for a minute that this represents the whole lot – only the better known. Where the initials have become acronyms, I have tried to render the pronunciation in parentheses. Otherwise, the letters are uttered. Some of their functions are self-evident; others, I have briefly explained.

ARESEP (ah-reh-sep): Autoridad Reguladora de Servicios Públicos, Public Services Regulatory Authority, responsible for regulating prices of public services.

AyA (ah-ee-ah): Instituto Costarricense de Acueductos y Alcantarillados, Costa Rican Water and Sewer Institute, responsible for all water services in Costa Rica.

CCSS: Caja Costarricense de Seguro Social, Costa Rican Social Security System. Though CCSS is often written, it is always spoken of as La Caja. The word “caja” basically means “box,” but has taken on a variety of other meanings. It means “cash box,” so it also means “cash register,” “safe” and “fund.” Costa Rica's concept of social security includes the entire state medical system: hospitals, clinics, salaries and drugs. It is also the institution that collects money for pension and disability funds. All employees have money deducted from their paychecks for this, and many independents, foreign and Tico, pay some $7 to $10 dollars a month to receive medical care and a pension.

CNE: Comisión Nacional de Prevención de Riesgos y Atención de Emergencias, National Emergency Commission, equivalent to the United States' FEMA.

CONAVI (co-nah-bee): Consejo Nacional de Vialidad, National Roadway Council, part of MOPT (see separate listing), in charge of highway construction and maintenance.

EBAIS (eh-bice): Equipos Básicos de Atención Integral de Salud, literally Basic Teams for Whole Health Attention. This huge mouthful is the acronym for nothing more than the health service that the Caja provides to outlying areas.

EEUU: Estados Unidos, United States. These initials are often written but never said. They are doubled to avoid confusion with Estados Unidos Mexicanos.

ICE (ee-say): Instituto Costarricense de Electricidad, Costa Rican Electricity Institute, responsible for electricity service in most urban and suburban areas, while various other agencies and co-ops handle other areas. Moreover, at the moment, ICE also handles all Costa Rican phone service, though the Central American Free-Trade Agreement with the United States (CAFTA – another acronym! – or TLC, Tratado de Libre Comercio, in Spanish) may change that.

ICT: Instituto Costarricense de Turismo, Costa Rican Tourism Board.

IMAS (ee-mas): Instituto Mixto de Ayuda Social, Mixed Institute for Social Aid, is the government agency responsible for helping the poor. Basically, it is the institution responsible for social work and distributing funds for this purpose.

INA (ee-nah): Instituto Nacional de Aprendizaje, National Training Institute, provides vocational courses to adults.

INS (eens): Instituto Nacional de Seguros, National Insurance Institute. As the name indicates, INS sells insurance, and currently is the only way to buy insurance in Costa Rica, though this will change under CAFTA. People who prefer private medical service in Costa Rica instead of using the Caja can buy insurance from INS at a reasonable price, by U.S. standards.

INVU (een-boo): Instituto Nacional de Vivienda y Urbanismo, National Institute for Housing and Urban Development, constructs housing developments for the clase media (which, here, is not quite what North Americans think of as the middle class).

MINAET (mee-nigh-et): Ministerio de Ambiente, Energía y Telecomunicaciones, Environment, Energy and Telecommunications Ministry. This used to be simply MINAE until last year, when the telecommunications part was added. What will they tack on next?

MOPT (mope): Ministerio de Obras Públicas y Transportes, Public Works and Transport Ministry, regulates public transportation, as well as car and driver's licenses. The traffic police (tránsitos) are also paid by MOPT.

OEA: Organización de los Estados Americanos, Organization of American States (OAS in English).

OIJ: Organismo de Investigación Judicial, Judicial Investigation Police. This is the agency of the federal police, equivalent to the FBI in the United States.

ONU: Organización de las Naciones Unidas, United Nations (U.N. in English.)

PANI (pah-nee): Patronato Nacional de la Infancia, literally National Childhood Patronage, what we call the Child Welfare Office.

RITEVE (ree-teh-veh): Revisión Técnica Vehicular, Vehicular Technical Inspection. All motor vehicles in Costa Rica must pass a technical inspection before they can have documents renewed. Don't ask me why the acronym begins in “RI” instead of “RE.”

RECOPE (reh-co-peh): Refinadora Costarricense de Petróleo, National Oil Refinery.

UCR: Universidad de Costa Rica, University of Costa Rica (located in the eastern San José suburb of San Pedro).

UNA (oo-nah): Universidad Nacional, National University (located in Heredia, north of San José).

UNED (oo-ned): Universidad Estatal a Distancia, State University at a Distance, responsible for what we call “correspondence courses,” though a certain amount of participation is required for some courses.

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