No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeArchiveSkirt Conflict Plagues Ministry

Skirt Conflict Plagues Ministry

LAST week’s Independence Day, Sept. 15, filled most streets throughout the country with uniformed children and the staccato, snappy sound of marching band drums as schools displayed their patriotism in mandatory school parades. However, this year as in the past, some eyes were not focused on the children, but on the length of the skirts that made up some uniforms, the cause of controversy in recent years.Skirts ending above the knees have been banned for the last two years as part of a reformed dress code implemented after former Public Education Minister Astrid Fischel was offended by a Tex-Mex dance routine in a 2003 Independence Day parade (TT, Aug. 29, 2003). However, in the two years since, some schools have shown a little too much independence – and a little too much leg – in their uniforms, disregarding the new rules and allowing short skirts, resulting in front page media coverage and a mess for the ministry.This year, the ministry took its case to President Abel Pacheco, and the rules – previously detailed in a guidebook – were affirmed in a decree issued jointly by the President and the ministry that set nationwide regulations for appropriate behavior, decent dress, acceptable music and other aspects of school parades on national holidays.IRVIN Mathews, the legal advisor for the ministry, told The Tico Times the decree isn’t focused strictly on miniskirts, nor dress in general, but is an overall attempt to regulate the parades.“We would like to see a return to the parades of yesteryear,” Mathews said. “The celebration of historic events is important for the country.”With that spirit, the decree requires that uniforms be “sober, austere, attending to historic criteria and traditional of the institution.”It also forbids military marches and music that isn’t classic, traditional Costa Rican or Latin American music.Infractions are punishable by measures from verbal admonishments to suspension, according to Vice-Minister of Education Wilfrido Blanco.BUT, just as the news of Costa Rica’s independence was delayed in reaching this country in 1821 as the messenger rode by horseback from Guatemala, perhaps the new decree had not yet reached the ears of all the schools, as skirts continued to bounce above the knees of more than just a few students in last Thursday’s parades.While some parents said they support the ministry’s efforts, a mother in Tres Ríos, east of San José, told The Tico Times she thought that the skirts the girls wore were too long.“They look prettier shorter. These are really long. I don’t like it,” said Malena Quirós, 43, as girls marched by in skirts hemmed just barely above the knees.

Trending Now

Costa Rica Study Suggests Earth Has Far More Insect Species Than Scientists Thought

A major new study built on more than three decades of fieldwork in Costa Rica’s Guanacaste Conservation Area suggests Earth may be home to...

Costa Rica Receives €10 Million EU Program for Migrant Support

The European Union has launched a €10 million initiative in Costa Rica aimed at expanding support for migrants, refugees and people seeking international protection....

Taylor Swift, Travis Kelce and the Costa Rica Sloths Named After Them

As Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce draw global attention around a reported wedding celebration at Madison Square Garden in New York, Costa Rica’s...

World Cup 2026 Exposes Soccer Gap for Central America and the Caribbean

The teams from Central America and the Caribbean have managed just one draw at the 2026 World Cup, another failure for a region that...

Costa Rica Study Finds Rare Red Spiny Lobster Population Hidden for 40 Years

Divers and fishermen have long called spiny lobsters "bugs," a nod to their long antennae and armored, insect like build. For more than four...

Costa Rica on Green Alert as Tropical Wave Triggers Flooding Risk

The National Emergency Commission (CNE) has declared a Green Alert for the entire country as Tropical Wave No. 19 moved across Costa Rica today,...

Costa Rica Under Weather Alert After Tropical Wave Triggers Flooding

Costa Rica starts the day dealing with the effects of Tropical Wave 19, after heavy rains flooded homes, forced residents into emergency shelters, closed...

Costa Rican Soccer Hit by Match-Fixing Scandal

Costa Rican soccer is facing one of its most serious integrity cases in recent years after three players were suspended for 15 years over...

Costa Rica’s Route 27 Contractor Faces Nearly $100 Million in Possible Fines

The Route 27 sinkhole that has disrupted traffic for more than a month is now part of a broader accountability fight over one of...
Avatar
🌴 The Weekly Pura Vida

Costa Rica, Once a Week

The week's top stories, weather & insider tips — delivered every Sunday. One email, zero clutter.

🔒 Free. No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.

Loading…

Latest News from Costa Rica

Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Car Rentals
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Travel