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September 1, 2009
   
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Newly discovered: A photograph of the newly discovered San Pedro de Lóvago canyon in Nicaragua's central department of Chontales. A team of explorers stumbled upon the canyon last month near La Soledad river.

EFE/El Nuevo Diario

| Previous Daily News

Electricity discount stalled: An employee opens the gate to the electrical substation at Colima de Tibás, north of San José. Cuts in electricity prices expected to take effect Tuesday have been suspended while a court considers an appeal made by the Costa Rican Electricity Institute (ICE). The authorities had requested that the energy companies lower their rates by an average of 7.4 percent.

Ronald Reyes | Tico Times

Anticipated discounts for Costa Rica electricity rates suspended
Eight days after the announcement of a decrease in nationwide electricity rates by the Public Services Regulatory Authority (ARESEP), the Administrative Contention Court ordered a suspension of the discounted rates, which were expected to begin Tuesday.
Congress to speed up permit process for tourist transport
Costa Rica legislators are considering a bill that would make it easier for tour operators to obtain permits for vehicles.
Tamarindo police avoid eviction
Following months of uncertainty, the police in the northern Pacific Costa Rican town of Tamarindo can now be certain of one thing – they won't be evicted from their station.
Nicaragua government pushes tax reform package
MANAGUA, Nicaragua – Strapped for cash and challenged by dwindling sources of income, the government of President Daniel Ortega wants to ask taxpayers to shoulder more of the burden.
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.

 

Anticipated discounts for
Costa Rica electricity rates suspended
By Adam Williams
Tico Times Staff | awilliams@ticotimes.net

Eight days after the announcement of a decrease in nationwide electricity rates by the Public Services Regulatory Authority (ARESEP), the Administrative Contention Court ordered a suspension of the discounted rates, which were expected to begin Tuesday.

The suspension was granted in response to appeals made by the Costa Rican Electricity Institute (ICE), who were to see the prices for their electricity cut by an average of 7.4 percent. The decision was announced by the Administrative Contention Court late Friday afternoon.

According to a statement released by ARESEP, the Administrative Contention Court “as a provisional measure, will enact the immediate suspension of the effects of the administrative act (cutting rates).”

Representatives of ARESEP and ICE are scheduled to meet Friday, Sept. 4, in an attempt to come to an agreement on the rates.

On Aug. 20, ARESEP announced that a nationwide decrease in electricity rates was scheduled to begin on Sept. 1. The pricing agency reported that the drop in prices was justified due to a significant decrease in actual spending needed for hydrocarbons compared with ICE's original projections. According to ARESEP, in 2008 ICE spent ¢ 97.67 million ($168,400) for thermal (petroleum-based) generation of electricity. The cost of thermal generation for 2009 is estimated to be ¢ 45.476 million ($78,406), which would indicate a savings of ¢ 52.49 million ($90,500). ARESEP felt that some of the savings should be felt by consumers.

“Our responsibility as regulators is to assure all Costa Ricans that the prices will be adjusted up or down, depending on the movement of the costs,” Regulator General Fernando Herrero said on Aug. 20. “We are not here only to raise (rates).”

The proposed discounted rates were to be applied to all companies that provide electricity service.

Congress to speed up permit
process for tourist transport
By Chrissie Long
Tico Times Staff | clong@ticotimes.net

Costa Rica legislators are considering a bill that would make it easier for tour operators to obtain permits for vehicles.

As the law stands now, Luis Alvarado – like dozens of tour agency operators across the country – has to submit documents every 30 days to renew permits to travel on the country's roads and highways.

“Every 30 days I have to file paperwork for permits. And then I have to do it again for 30 more days, and 30 more days and 30 more days,” said Alvarado, stressing his words to emphasise the nuisance of the process. As a manager with Interviajes Costa Rica Transports Service, which has a fleet of more than five different types of vehicles, he said, “This is something that has affected us a lot.”

The legislation, which is expected to pass after second debate this Wednesday, would extend tourist transport permits for permits for two years and create a new category for tour operators, instead of lumping them with school vehicles and transportation services for workers, as it stands now.

“Tourism is one of the most important activities in Costa Rica,” said congressman Luis Barrantes. “And this mechanism that exists now (for permit renewal) is very bad, very slow and goes counter to tourism.”

Barrantes estimates that 40 percent of people visiting Costa Rica travel with various tour operators.

“To get a permit, right now, is very rigid,” he said. “This law would give more flexibility, while also creating a more just process for those operating tourist transport services.”

Tamarindo police avoid eviction

By Mike McDonald
Tico Times Staff | mmcdonald@ticotimes.net

Following months of uncertainty, the police in the northern Pacific Costa Rican town of Tamarindo can now be certain of one thing – they won't be evicted from their station.

Officials of the Santa Cruz Municipality, in the northwestern Guanacaste province, signed an agreement with the Public Security Ministry to pay the rent for the current station – located at the edge of Tamarindo in the privately owned Cabinas Maleko – through December 2009.

The municipality, which is in charge of collecting taxes cin Tamarindo, has never funded the police station. The station, instead, has relied on private donations to meet the $1,500 per month rent at Cabinas Maleko.

The impact of the economic crisis this year caused a drop in donations, and officials worried that police would have to move the station to the nearby hamlet of Villareal, a move that was forced in 2007 due to a lack of funding. After two months, the police moved back to the edge of Tamarindo when they noticed a spike in crime.

“Villareal is too far away,” said Diego Chavarria, a Tamarindo police officer, who reasoned that the closer the police are to the area's downtown, the better the service they can provide (TT, March 27).

Tamarindo community organizations are working with developers to build a permanent station for the police on a 1,800-square-meter lot that a private developer donated to the community in 2007.

Officials have said they hope to have the new location prepared before early next year.

Nicaragua government pushes tax reform package

By Tim Rogers
Nica Times Staff | trogers@ticotimes.net

MANAGUA, Nicaragua – Strapped for cash and challenged by dwindling sources of income, the government of President Daniel Ortega wants to ask taxpayers to shoulder more of the burden.

Tax revenue is on the decline and the economy is slipping into recession, in the wake of cancelation or suspension of more than $100 million in international budget support. The Sandinista administration has been unable to make ends meet in its 2009 budget. Ortega has already requested two budget cuts this year, shaving the original $1.8 billion budget by $106 million. More cuts are expected in the weeks to come, lawmakers say.

“The government has lost access to quick disbursement funds from foreign donors and the budget support group, and this is all going to translate into a slowdown of public spending, said Liberal Constitutional Party lawmaker Francisco Aguirre, of the National Assembly's Commission on Budget, Economy and Production.

Though Nicaragua is set to receive $105 million from the International Monetary Fund's Special Drawing Rights, an international stimulus package to give liquidity to the global economy, Nicaragua is still precariously underfunded.

See the Sept. 4 print or digital edition of The Nica Times, a publication sold along with The Tico Times, for more on this story.

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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