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Chinchilla accused of stalling decentralization efforts

 

Government officials, local leaders and consultants all but set off fireworks at the introduction of the decentralization law in the Crowne Plaza Corobicí Hotel last May.
 
With an elaborate lunch buffet and speeches by then-President Oscar Arias and his brother Rodrigo Arias, then presidency minister, which brought standing ovations, the attendees celebrated the fact that municipalities had finally succeeded in wresting power and financial resources away from the central government.
 
Under the new Law to Strengthen Municipalities and Decentralization (FOMUDE), the central government has seven years to effect a transfer of at least 10 percent of public resources to local governments. It must also ensure that the infrastructure is in place for municipalities to use the funds productively.
 
But, three months later, municipalities have not seen the promised support.
 
At a press conference Wednesday, President Laura Chinchilla dismissed claims that her government was purposefully delaying the transfer of power.
 
“No one is delaying anything,” she said. “The law was approved. The process was set in place. And we are going to implement it.”
 
But the factor that has blocked the decentralization effort for decades – an alleged lack of capacity by local governments – is also tying up Chinchilla in putting the legislation into effect.
 
She said she is not comfortable transferring power when municipalities aren’t prepared to manage the additional resources.
 
“We want to make sure that at the moment we turn over management, service improves, it doesn’t get worse,” she said. “Our mission has always been the same – to comply with the law – but at the same time we need to guarantee we don’t disrupt service to the public.”
 
She said the government is working “rigorously” on advancing the decentralization process.

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