Costa Rica News, Daily News in Costa Rica by the Tico Times
January 13, 2010
   
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Haiti's catastrophe: Panic sets in after Tuesday afternoon's magnitude 7 earthquake and aftershocks, one as high as a magnitude 5.9, rocked Haiti. The event is being called “catastrophic” and is expected to have caused major loss of life in and around the capital of Port-au-Prince. A tsunami watch was put out for Haiti, Cuba and the Bahamas but was lifted.

EFE/Radioteleginenhaiti.com

Costa Rica welcomes three key ambassadors
President Oscar Arias bestowed credentials Tuesday afternoon on three of his most important diplomatic partners: China, Europe and the United States.
Still time to file luxury home taxes
Tax collection offices throughout the country are open from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. this week so that anyone who has yet to pay the new luxury home tax can do so.
Hard rains persist in Costa Rica's Caribbean
The National Emergency Commission (CNE) maintained a yellow alert for the province of Limón, the Northern Zone and Sarapiquí de Heredia on Tuesday as a cold front that has caused strong winds and heavy rainfall continued to slam parts of the country.
Edited by Alex Leff
Tico Times Staff | aleff@ticotimes.net
Costa Rica Daily News updates by the Tico Times Newspaper
January 13

Palmares Festival
Concerts, sports, contests, rides, food, carnival, horse parade, Jan. 13-25, Palmares, Alajuela, www.fiestaspalmares.com.  

Notas insólitas
Exhibit of impossible musical instruments, through Feb. 24, TEOR/éTica, Barrio Amón, Ca. 7, Av. 9/11. Info: 2233-8775, www.teoretica.org.

UCR Open Classes
All ages, watercolors, photography, science fiction literature, caring for pets and plants, ecology, computer programs, knitting, limit management for parents, poetry, Costa Rican snakes, San Ramón campus; drawing, garbage management, taking care of nature by playing, different schedules in both places, Tacares campus, Grecia, register Jan. 11-13, 9 a.m.-noon and 1-4 p.m., 2437-9848.

Costa Rica welcomes three key ambassadors

By Chrissie Long
Tico Times Staff | clong@ticotimes.net

President Oscar Arias bestowed credentials Tuesday afternoon on three of his most important diplomatic partners: China, Europe and the United States.

With a ceremony at Casa Presidencial in Zapote, in southeast San José, Chinese Ambassador Li Changua, U.S. Ambassador Anne Slaughter Andrew and European Commissioner Mendel Goldstein were officially welcomed to Costa Rica.

U.S. Ambassador Andrew takes over from Peter Cianchette, an appointee of former President George W. Bush. Cianchette returned to his home state of Maine in July.

An environmental consultant whose husband played a pivotal role in the election of U.S. President Barack Obama, Andrew has dedicated a career to energy conservation and the environment, serving in an advisory capacity to both private and non-profit enterprises. Most recently, she was a principal at the Washington, D.C.-based company New Energy Nexus, where she advised companies and entrepreneurs on energy-related investments.

Speaking to the press after receiving her credentials, Andrew said she will work “without rest to strengthen (bilateral) relations and to look for new opportunities for our countries and our people to work together, specifically relating to opportunities such as the environment, education and clean energy.”

Not her first time to Costa Rica – she visited the Osa Peninsula five years ago – Andrew said she was expecting to see more sun. With the passing of a cold front that caused flooding in the Caribbean and high winds throughout the Central Valley, Andrew said she hopes to see sunshine soon.

Changhua replaces former Chinese Ambassador Wang Xiaoyuan, who initiated a series of infrastructure projects, expanded bilateral relations and left a real stamp on Costa Rica during his tenure.

Xiaoyuan is credited not only with the construction of a new national soccer stadium, laying the first brick of a Chinatown in San José and the renovation of Costa Rica's oil refinery, but also with instigating a series of trade talks between the two countries.

Changhua comes with a resume of his own. Most recently serving as ambassador to Colombia, he's occupied similar high-profile positions in Chile, Mexico, Ecuador, Venezuela and Uruguay. He has a resume that includes 30 years of foreign service experience in Latin America.

Mendel Goldstein also was among the diplomats to receive credentials on Tuesday. The newly appointed European Commission's ambassador served as representative to Mexico between 2005 and 2008 and to Peru from 2001 to 2005. Also, he worked on the association agreement between Mexico and the EU, which went into effect in 1997.

Both China and the European Commission currently are negotiating trade agreements with Costa Rica.

Still time to file luxury home taxes

By Chrissie Long
Tico Times Staff | clong@ticotimes.net

Tax collection offices throughout the country are open from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. this week so that anyone who has yet to pay the new luxury home tax can do so.

The fine for missing the Jan. 15 deadline is 10 times the original tax, which is levied on a progressive scale from .25 percent of home value to .55 percent.

The luxury home tax – or solidarity tax – applies to homes valued at $172,000 or more. Property features such as land, pools or guest homes should not be included when assessing a home for the tax.

“Our purpose is to facilitate access to the (Tax Administration) so potential contributors can comply with their obligation to present themselves and pay on time,” said Loretta Rodríguez, vice minister of income for the Finance Ministry, about the extended hours. “We know the level of complexity in terms of the specificity required in determining the values.

“Precisely for this reason, we are making all resources possible in order to facilitate the payment within the prescribed period, especially considering the high fines.”

According to the latest numbers from the Tax Administration, 3,257 of the 10,000 qualified homeowners (around 58 percent) have registered to pay the tax.

Many continue to experience problems in compliance due to complexities in the process of self-assessing a home or completing the paperwork with a local tax collection office. The deadline to pay the tax was already pushed back because the online process excluded any foreigners from paying.

Despite current glitches, Rodríguez said in a statement released Friday that “the deadline would not be extended again.”

See related story for more:
Luxury Tax Deadline Extended to January

Hard rains persist in Costa Rica's Caribbean

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

Caribbean drenching: Power lines dangle in the rain-soaked road in Cocles, on the southern Caribbean coast, after two posts collapsed as a result of constant downpours and wind since early Monday. As workers from the Costa Rican Electricity Institute conduct repairs, area residents have been left largely without power and frustrated since Monday morning.

Meg Yamamoto | Tico Times

The National Emergency Commission (CNE) maintained a yellow alert for the province of Limón, the Northern Zone and Sarapiquí de Heredia on Tuesday as a cold front that has caused strong winds and heavy rainfall continued to slam parts of the country.

On Monday, a total of 136 millimeters of rain fell in Limón and winds in the Central Valley reached 74 kilometers per hour, according to the National Meteorological Institute (IMN).

As of Tuesday afternoon, the CNE counted a total of 483 evacuees in shelters in Matina and Sarapiquí, all of whom were flooded out of their homes. Shelters have been set up in El Tigre, La Guaria and Caño San José for Heredia province for evacuees and in Goshen, Santa Marta and Bataán for those fleeing from Limón.

CNE did not report any more wind damage on Tuesday. As of Monday, 39 homes had lost their roofs and power lines had snapped in Sarapiquí and Limón. Reported power outages continued on Tuesday.

The IMN did not have Tuesday rainfall totals before press time, but meteorologists said that Monday's forecast of between 100-150 millimeters of rain along the Caribbean coast for Tuesday and Wednesday is still accurate.

Conditions could begin to improve late Wednesday, meteorologists said, adding that Thursday and Friday could bring drier weather.

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!
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