No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeArchiveProposal Would Limit Appointment of Directors

Proposal Would Limit Appointment of Directors

A bill expected to go before theLegislative Assembly for vote in the comingweeks proposes to limit the power ofthe Executive Branch to appoint directorsof the state-owned institutions, and aims toensure the most qualified people are chosenfor the job.The bill, presented by Ruth Montoyaof the Citizen Action Party (PAC), wouldchange a law passed in 1970 that gives theExecutive Branch the power to name fourof the seven members of the boards ofdirectors of each government institution,such as those now under fire for corruptionscandals: the Social Security System(Caja), the Costa Rican ElectricityInstitute (ICE), the National TrainingInstitute (INA), and the NationalInsurance Institute (INS).“REGRETTABLY, in our countrymany – not all, but many – of the appointmentsof the members of the boards ofdirectors are done as political favors,”Montoya told The Tico Times. “For example,if someone helps a lot with a(President’s) campaign he could be awardeda position, but that doesn’t mean theperson is the most suitable for the job.”The law would still allow thePresident to appoint directors, but onlythrough a public application process handledby a separate body independent ofthe Executive Branch.The bill was presented in May, beforethe corruption scandals made headlines inthe nation’s news media.“It is not something that came up inresponse to the facts coming out in public,”Montoya said. “Rather, it is a response to acommitment to citizens” to ensure the institutionshave the best leadership.Now, as accusations surface that the corruptionthat has plagued government institutionsthese last weeks may have been conceivedin their boards of directors, a changein the law has taken a new priority.La Nación printed an opinion piecethis week by Eladio Jara calling for thereinstatement of the original process, inwhich the President appointed one directorto each board of directors every year, andthey served eight-year terms.ANOTHER bill Montoya has proposedcalls for the abolition of the executive presidentpost, a position within the boards ofdirectors appointed by the nation’s Presidentand created by a law in 1974.The position “is an arm of theExecutive Branch within the autonomousinstitutions that removes their ability toserve as engines of development,” thePAC legislator said. For the institutions,long-term planning is difficult when theexecutive presidents are replaced everyfour years along with the nation’sPresident, she explained.The bills follow a series of politicalpromises made over the years, including acampaign trail statement President AbelPacheco made, that the law should bechanged, the daily La Nación reported.THE original process was revampeddecades ago because, “It was part of anagreement between the two main parties toensure control of the institutions,” saidpolitical analyst Luis Guillermo Solís, ofthe political science department at theUniversity of Costa Rica.“It was inconceivable to do it otherwisein the 1970s because the two mainparties controlled everything. It was a‘normal’ thing to do at the time,” heexplained.Solís agreed the system needs tochange, but said the former system wasnot perfect either.“There was still a lot of politickinggoing on before,” he said. “The procedureof appointments is not the only problem. Itwould take a refurbishing of the wholeconcept of these institutions.”

Trending Now

Powerful Earthquake Topples Buildings in Venezuela

A powerful earthquake struck north-central Venezuela this afternoon, collapsing buildings in the capital, Caracas, knocking out power in parts of the city and prompting...

Costa Rica Opens Probe Into Blast During Presidential Visit to Crucitas

Costa Rica’s Judicial Investigation Agency, known as the OIJ, opened a preliminary investigation into a detonation that interrupted President Laura Fernández’s visit to Crucitas,...

Costa Rica’s New San Carlos Highway Segment Gets Comptroller Approval

One of Costa Rica’s longest-delayed road projects has cleared a major hurdle after the Comptroller General’s Office approved a path forward for the central...

Costa Rica Beach Town Debates Moving Nightlife Out of Downtown

Garabito Mayor Francisco González has opened a heated debate over the future of Jacó’s nightlife, proposing that the canton use its regulatory plan to...

Tourists Evacuated, Kingpin’s Children Arrested in Costa Rica’s Biggest Drug Raid

A day after Costa Rica carried out the largest police operation in its history, authorities have arrested three children of extradited drug suspect Edwin...

Latin American Women Head to Wimbledon Without a Clear Favorite

Latin America will not arrive at Wimbledon without talent. It will arrive without a clear women’s singles favorite. That is the more honest reading...

Middle Class Life in Costa Rica vs the United States

According to the website Franchisetimes.com, my household income in Costa Rica puts me solidly in the middle class. I live comfortably, if simply. Bills...

Colombia Shifts Right as Abelardo de la Espriella Wins Presidency

Millionaire attorney Abelardo de la Espriella will govern Colombia aligned with the principles of a right wing that is regaining ground across the continent,...

Enormous Papagayo Resort Collides With Costa Rica’s Forest Law

On a stretch of Pacific coastline inside the Golfo de Papagayo tourism zone, an ongoing standoff between developers and environmental advocates reached a new...
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