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August 17, 2010
   
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A new day: A daycare center in Purral de Guadalupe is among the installations being targeted for assistance by the National Day Care Network, which was kicked off by President Laura Chinchilla on Monday.

Ronald Reyes | Tico Times

Costa Rica's President Chinchilla launches national day care program
Costa Rica's first female president, Laura Chinchilla, officially launched the National Day Care Network today with a pledge of ¢ 32 million ($63,000) to the poorest communities in 10 areas of the country.
Protesters from Costa Rica's public universities to march on Casa Presidencial
Students, professors and administrators from Costa Rica's four public universities will march to Casa Presidencial on Tuesday morning to demand an 11 percent budget increase over the next five years.
Sabana to Alajuelita route in San José closed for repairs
The road that joins La Sabana with Alajuelita will be closed for six to eight weeks, according to the Ministry of Public Works and Transport (MOPT).
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Edited by Steve Mack
Tico Times Staff | smack@ticotimes.net
Costa Rica Daily News updates by the Tico Times Newspaper
August 17

Baden-Wuërttemberg Youth Band in Concert
From Germany, Aug. 17, 7 p.m., church, Liberia, Guanacaste. Info: 2283-5027.

Central American Theater Festival
Features “España Hoy, Drama and Women in Spain,” talk by Charo Francés, Aug. 17, 7 p.m., at Spanish Cultural Center.

20th Credomatic Music Festival
TENET ( U.S. ), a capella, Aug. 17, 8 p.m., National Theater.

Costa Rica's President Chinchilla launches national day care program

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

Costa Rica's first female president, Laura Chinchilla, officially launched the National Day Care Network today with a pledge of ¢ 32 million ($63,000) to the poorest communities in 10 areas of the country.

The money is expected to bring care to 400 children under 5 years old, enabling their mothers or fathers to pursue jobs outside the home.

The effort is much more than just a push to open more day care centers, Chinchilla said at a press conference on Monday. The idea of the network is to reach children at a critical stage in their development so that every Costa Rican starts life with the same opportunities.

Early child care is an area in which Costa Rica continues to have many shortcomings, she said.

The money will be used to expand existing facilities such as community homes and government-run day care centers, and to offer loans so that more women can operate day care centers from their homes.

The plan is being introduced as part of a larger agenda of reducing extreme poverty in Costa Rica by a full 10 percent, Chinchilla said.

At present, aid arrives to poor homes in pieces. Sometimes a son or daughter can get a scholarship, other times a parent receives job training, but what these families need, Chinchilla said, is an integrated push from all sides to get them ontheir feet.

By bringing aid to communities in an integral way, she hopes to permanently reduce poverty.

In keeping with this coordinated approach, the 10 areas where the administration is focusing the day care initiative are also the focus of the poverty relief plan. These include Los Chiles, Guatuso, Upala, La Cruz, Santa Cruz, Nicoya, Cartago, Curridabat, Heredia and San José.

Protesters from Costa Rica's public universities to march on Casa Presidencial

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

Students, professors and administrators from Costa Rica's four public universities will march to Casa Presidencial on Tuesday morning to demand an 11 percent budget increase over the next five years.

Some marchers will leave from Parque Nacional and the Plaza de la Democracia in San José at 9 a.m., while others will gather first at the State University at a Distance in Betania, near San Pedro, east of San José, and at the University of Costa Rica, in San Pedro center. All will converge on the Fuente de la Hispanidad, at the San Pedro traffic circle. From there, they will make the short walk south to Casa Presidencial in Zapote.

The traffic police are advising commuters to seek alternative routes on Tuesday morning.

Sabana to Alajuelita route in San José closed for repairs

By Matt Levin
Tico Times Staff | mlevin@ticotimes.net

The road that joins La Sabana with Alajuelita will be closed for six to eight weeks, according to the Ministry of Public Works and Transport (MOPT).

Last week, MOPT said in a press release that the road – which connects the western San José neighborhood of Sabana Sur to Alajuelita and Escazú -- would be closed due to landslides caused by heavy rains. A representative of the Traffic Police's information service confirmed Monday that the road has closed, and will remain closed for approximately two months.

The road has been repeatedly affected by landslides since it opened less than a year ago. In its press release, MOPT said that the National Highway Council (Conavi) intended to take permanent action to fix the problem of road blockages caused by the landslides. The highway was built by the Spanish construction company Autopistas del Sol, which also built and manages the new Caldera Highway, which runs between San José and Caldera on the Pacific coast.

The Caldera Highway also has been affected often by landslides since it opened earlier this year.

For up-to-date information on road closings throughout the country, call the Traffic Police hotline at 2222-9330.

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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