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September 19, 2007
   
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Protecting Parrots: Better protection for animals like this scarlet macaw, photographed on the southern Osa Peninsula's Corcovado National Park, is the goal of wildlife activists and business owners. The nonprofit Association for the Preservation of Wild Flora and Fauna (APREFLOFAS) and the Importadora Monge retail chain yesterday announced they are collecting signatures for a popular initiative to present to the Legislative Assembly that would change the current Wildlife Law.

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Environmentalists in Costa Rica Seek To Revamp Wildlife Law

Environmentalists and business owners joined forces yesterday to call for a new wildlife law that would establish stricter penalties for the trafficking of wildlife and other violations and end sport hunting in the country.

Clouds of Gas and Ash Blow Over Arenal
A cloud of gas and volcanic rocks sliding down Costa Rica's north-central Arenal Volcano caught the attention of residents and scientists yesterday morning.
Escazú Citizens Propose Building Moratorium

Development in the upscale western San José suburb of Escazú is out of control and jeopardizing quality of life, according to residents, who Monday night asked the town's Mayor and Municipal Council to declare a moratorium on new construction permits in the canton.

Costa Rica Daily News updates by the Tico Times Newspaper
September 19

Free Film Screening
Van, Van, Empezó La Fiesta,” directed by Liliana Mazure and Aaron Vega, Cuba, 2000, 7 p.m., Sala Calle 15, San José, Ave. 2, Calle 13/15.

“Requiem”
Dance performance by Danza Universitaria of UCR, today and tomorrow, 8 p.m., National Theater, San José, Ave. 2, Calle 3/5. Info: 221-9417.

Edited By Amanda Roberson
Tico Times Staff | aroberson@ticotimes.net


Environmentalists in Costa Rica
Seek To Revamp Wildlife Law

By Dave Sherwood
Tico Times Staff | dsherwood@ticotimes.net

Environmentalists and business owners joined forces yesterday to call for a new wildlife law that would establish stricter penalties for the trafficking of wildlife and other violations and end sport hunting in the country.

The nonprofit Association for the Preservation of Wild Flora and Fauna (APREFLOFAS) and Importadora Monge, a well-known chain department store, announced intentions to collect the 160,000 signatures required to present a popular initiative to the Legislative Assembly.

Costa Rican citizens can sign petitions between now and next June at any of the chain's 150 stores throughout the country.

“Wildlife is what attracts people to Costa Rica, and we're proud to serve as a platform for this initiative,” said Importadora Monge marketing director Mario Hernández.

According to Gino Biamonte, executive director of APREFLOFAS, the wildlife law on the books is in dire need of review as development pressures and tourism increase in the country.

“We want the laws that protect our wildlife to be much stronger,” he said. “And just as importantly, we want Ticos to get involved in the process of protecting their own resources.”


Clouds of Gas and Ash Blow Over Arenal

By Amanda Roberson
Tico Times Staff | aroberson@ticotimes.net

A cloud of gas and volcanic rocks sliding down Costa Rica's north-central Arenal Volcano caught the attention of residents and scientists yesterday morning.

This “pyroclastic flow” occurred at 10:12 a.m. west of the volcano's main crater and was observed from a lookout point inside the Arenal Volcano National Park, according to a statement from the Volcanological and Seismological Observatory of Costa Rica (OVSICORI) based at National University (UNA) in Heredia, north of San José.

A pyroclastic flow is an eruption of high-temperature gases, rocks and ash that makes its way down a volcano in the form of a cloud, explained OVSICORI volcanologist Rodolfo Van Der Laat. This phenomenon is not out of the ordinary for Arenal, especially during this time of year.

Yesterday's activity did not pose any threat to those living near the volcano, though it did catch residents' and tourists' attention, Van Der Laat said.

OVSICORI experts plan to fly over the volcano today to further investigate the situation.


Escazú Citizens Propose Building Moratorium

By Dave Sherwood
Tico Times Staff | dsherwood@ticotimes.net

Development in the upscale western San José suburb of Escazú is out of control and jeopardizing quality of life, according to residents, who Monday night asked the town's Mayor and Municipal Council to declare a moratorium on new construction permits in the canton.

In front of a packed house of officials and local residents, Carlos Ramírez, a lawyer from San Rafael de Escazú, said that the recent building boom has helped developers, but has left residents desperate and frustrated.

“What has happened to the common interest in this town? We're not against development, but we do want to see the laws obeyed,” said Ramírez, who believes ill-informed officials have allowed continued, uncontrolled development despite the canton's highly visible problems with traffic, sewage and water shortages.

Ramírez said a moratorium of up to one year is necessary to bring order to development and to revise the canton's 2005 Zoning Plan, which he said has done little to help the situation.

“The Zoning Plan exists to protect the rights of developers, simply to attract more money and investment,” he said.

Ricardo Marín, a representative of the municipality, said he understands the residents' concerns.

“We have the richest, and the poorest, people in Costa Rica in this town. We cannot continue along this path. We must ask, ‘what will Escazú of 2025 look like if we don't change?'” he said.

While most who attended the meeting agreed on the problem, not everyone agreed the moratorium is the solution. Some questioned its legality.

The town's Urban Development commission will present a feasibility study for the proposal by next week, according to Marín.

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