Costa Rica News, Daily News in Costa Rica by the Tico Times
Feb 10, 2009
   
LOGIN | SUBSCRIBE | GUIDEBOOKS | ARCHIVE SEARCH | CONTACT US |
| Home
| Top Story
| Business & Real Estate
Costa Rica Activities, Things to Do - Weekend Travel, Culture, Fishing | Arts, Travel & Fishing >
| The Nica Times
| Daily News
| Letters to the Editor
| Photo>
| Classified Ads >
| Exchange Rates
Central Bank
Reference Rate
BUY ¢556.05 SELL ¢566.08
| Previous Daily News
| Monday | Tuesday
| Wednesday | Thursday
| Friday
Worker for hire: Jeremy Barquero, 25, waits for help finding a job at the San José Municipality's Bolsa de Empleo employment program, after the bank where he worked fired him in November. As many as 40 people file into the job office each day. Read the Feb. 13 issue of The Tico Times for more on unemployment in Costa Rica.
Ronald Reyes | Tico Times
Job-seekers flood San José job bank
As many as 40 people a day, most of them women, visit the San José Municipality's Bolsa de Empleo employment program in search of a new job, according to the program's coordinator and only employee, Viviana Sánchez.
NGO builds prefab houses for Costa Rica earthquake victims
About 100 volunteers with the non-governmental organization Un Techo para mi País (A Roof for my Country) built 15 temporary homes this past weekend for families left homeless after the Jan. 8 earthquake.
U.S. medical mission won't return
after Sandinista leader ‘interference'
The director of a volunteer U.S. medical mission in Nicaragua said his volunteers will not return to Nicaragua after two leaders of the Sandinista party's Councils of Citizen Power “interfered” with the mission's ability to provide free healthcare to poor patients as retaliation for the mission's refusal to give special treatment to those selected by the Sandinista leaders.
Edited by Alex Leff
Tico Times Staff | aleff@ticotimes.net
Costa Rica Daily News updates by the Tico Times Newspaper
Feb 10

Photo exhibit: ‘Pandemia Child'
Through Feb. 26, Spanish Cultural Center, Avenida 13, Calle 31. Info: 2257-2919.

Mundoloco concerts
Features Michael Livingston and the Rebel Band, roots reggae, 9:30 p.m., Jazz Café, Escazú, 2288-4740, www.jazzcafecostarica.com .

Jazz jam session
Jazz Café Trio and guests, 10 p.m., Jazz Café, San Pedro, 2253-8933, www.jazzcafecostarica.com .

Job-seekers flood San José job bank
By Alex Leff
Tico Times Staff | aleff@ticotimes.net

As many as 40 people a day, most of them women, visit the San José Municipality's Bolsa de Empleo employment program in search of a new job, according to the program's coordinator and only employee, Viviana Sánchez.

The Bolsa aims to put employers in touch with qualified employees. These days, however, Sánchez said, a drop in companies' job offerings has made it harder to find a match for would-be workers.

Sánchez said about 170 jobless people sought her help in January alone during the office's hours of 8 to 11 a.m. Most of them were looking for skilled administrative jobs, she said.

Jeremy Barquero, 25, visited Sánchez's office Monday, saying he hadn't found a new job since being let go from HSBC bank in November. “I never thought it would take this long,” he said.

The office is located in the Municipality building on Avenida 10, and can be contacted at 2295-6060 or by e-mail at intermediacionempleo@msj.go.cr.

See the Feb. 13 issue of The Tico Times for more on this story.

NGO builds prefab houses for
Costa Rica earthquake victims

About 100 volunteers with the non-governmental organization Un Techo para mi País (A Roof for my Country) built 15 temporary homes this past weekend for families left homeless after the Jan. 8 earthquake.

The 18-square-meter wooden structures were constructed on a soccer field in Poasito, a town near the 6.2 magnitude quake's epicenter. Founded in Chile, Un Techo has previously raised 230 such structures in Costa Rica and some 40,000 more across Latin America, the NGO said in a press release.

Private sector companies and the government are helping cover the cost of the emergency homes, each costing $1,600. After the first 15, the NGO plans to build another 180.

“It's crucial we speed up the prefabrication of emer gency homes, if we really want to create a coherent response to the magnitude of the emergency, ” said Patricio Morera, Un Techo's head of social programs.

Anyone interested in volunteering can call 2234-6471 or visit www.untechoparamipais.org.

-Tico Times
U.S. medical mission won't return
after Sandinista leader ‘interference'
By Blake Schmidt
Nica Times Staff | bschmidt@ticotimes.net

The director of a volunteer U.S. medical mission in Nicaragua said his volunteers will not return to Nicaragua after two leaders of the Sandinista party's Councils of Citizen Power “interfered” with the mission's ability to provide free healthcare to poor patients as retaliation for the mission's refusal to give special treatment to those selected by the Sandinista leaders.

“We had a problem where the two employees that were involved brought 80 people to an eye clinic in Leon and demanded that their people be seen ahead of everyone else,” said Frederick Mikill, co-founder and director of New Orleans Medical Mission Services.

It was the mission's third trip to Nicaragua since 2006, but it was the first time that MIkill felt concerned for the safety of his 56 volunteers. After the doctors refused to prioritize treatments of the 80 patients selected by the CPC leaders, who are also hospital employees, the CPC leaders reportedly gave orders to other employees not to deliver water, food and transportation services to the volunteers.

In another incident, Mikill said a volunteer plastic surgeon had set up 40 surgeries for children with cleft lips at a hospital, but only seven of them showed up for their surgery. A Leon doctor had reportedly called the families of children with scheduled surgeries and told them their surgeries had been cancelled.

“For a doctor to prevent medical care for poor people or for any person is, for whatever reason, simply not right,” Mikill said.

Mikill said customs officials and police made it more difficult than necessary for the volunteers to bring medical supplies into the country. Though the mission had a health ministry official escort them through customs and immigration process on its first two missions, on this visit the Health Ministry said it could no longer great the volunteers at the airport. At the airport, customs officials said the volunteers didn't have the proper documents to bring medical supplies into the country but didn't let the volunteers leave the airport to obtain the proper documentation.

Though Mikill said the mission had problems with a small “minority” of employees at the Oscar Danilo Rosales hospital in Leon, the Health Ministry and hospitals were generally cooperative.

Manuel Alvarado, the hospital employee who was one of the two CPC members that demanded special treatment for his select patients, told the wire agency EFE that the mission's allegations were “calumny.”

“It's part of the right's campaign to disgrace the government” of Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega, said Alvarado.

But Mikill said the mission's decision to cancel further work in the country had nothing to do with politics, but with a lack of cooperation.

“We have no problem with working in a country that has a different political agenda than we do, because we're looking at the human side. We're trying to help people. What we do look for is cooperation and support. By and large we had that from the Health Ministry, but unfortunately they could not control the situation,” Mikill told The Nica Times in a phone interview.

He said some people made it clear during the Oct. 12-18 mission in Nicaragua that they “do not want U.S. citizens there.”

Mikill said his organization will continue its mission in other countries.

“There's plenty of other countries. I get requests continually for us to go to other places,” he said.

While the Ortega government says the CPCs help to strengthen “direct democracy” by giving a greater say to the poor, critics of the controversial groups say the groups have divided Nicaraguans and undermined existing institutions, and that there are no mechanisms in place to hold the groups accountable for their actions.

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!
Costa Rica dentist, health, teeth whitening, crowns, dental implants, bleaching, crowns, permanent make-up
Tico Times, Costa Rica, travel guide, guidebook, beaches, rainforests, hotels, activities, restaurants
a
RETURN TO THE TOP OF PAGE

HOME | SUBSCRIBE | ADVERTISE | GUIDEBOOKS | BACK ISSUES | ARCHIVE SEARCH | CONTACT US | ABOUT US | NEWSSTANDS | LINKS | POLICIES