No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeArchiveFires to Get a Dousing

Fires to Get a Dousing

Fighting fires will soon become easier, thanks to a bill passed this week that aims to fix an alarming shortage of working fire hydrants.

Lawmakers voted to make fire hydrants a “public good,” to be installed and maintained by water providers.

Hydrants have been abandoned for decades because no one is legally responsible for them. Costa Rica needs 10,000 fire hydrants, but it has only 5,000 and half of them function poorly, said Héctor Chaves, director of the Firefighters Corps.

“It’s almost a national emergency,” said National Liberation Party (PLN) lawmaker Fernando Sánchez. “We are sending (firefighters) into a war without weapons.”

Under the new bill, public and private water providers will pay for the hydrants by charging their clients a small tax, fixed by the Public Services Regulatory Authority (ARESEP).

Fires destroy some 1,100 houses every year, often for lack of water, Chaves said. Two trucks, each with about 1,000 gallons of water, usually respond to a fire alarm. But because it takes 1,000 gallons a minute to fight a fire, crews can run out of water after just two minutes, said Jorge Marrero, who directs the corps in the central Pacific and southern zones.

Firefighters then turn to hydrants or rivers, or they call for another fire truck.

Often, the closest hydrant is several blocks away and has little or no water.

A working fire hydrant can spew an average of 400 gallons per minute for up to two hours, Marrero said.

The hydrant shortage especially hurts poor people, whose wood houses tend to be more vulnerable to fires, Sánchez said.

On April 23, firefighters contained a fire in Desamparados, south of San José, but they needed 1,000 more gallons to finish the job.

The three closest fire hydrants had no water, said Ronny Luna, a local corps director. By the time firefighters doused the blaze with water from a nearby river, seven houses had been destroyed.

The National Insurance Institute (INS), which funds the Firefighters Corps, used to install and maintain fire hydrants, said Alvaro Escalante, who was corps director in the 1980s. But INS could not afford to keep pace with the growing population density.

Dozens of firefighters drove cranes and trucks to the doors of the Legislative Assembly Monday, and they sounded sirens periodically for hours as lawmakers debated.

The bill will become law once it is passed in a second vote and signed by the president.

 

Trending Now

Canada Begins Historic 2026 World Cup Campaign Against Bosnia

For the thousands of Canadians living in Costa Rica or passing through on vacation, tomorrow is a day circled on every calendar. At 2:00...

Lost at Sea: Costa Rica’s Fishing Communities Face Growing Pressure

Four fishermen from the Roxana II remain missing in Costa Rica’s North Pacific after rough seas linked to Tropical Storm Cristina caused multiple boating...

Cuba’s Tourism Industry Is Collapsing in Real Time

Cuba’s tourism industry is facing one of its sharpest collapses in decades, with visitor numbers plunging, major hotel brands pulling back, airlines cutting service...

Surviving Costa Rican Fisherman Says Two Crewmates Died at Sea

Just hours after Costa Rica celebrated the rescue of a second fisherman who survived nearly a week adrift in the Pacific Ocean, new details...

US Restricts Visas for Nicaraguan Officials After Brooklyn Rivera’s Death

The US State Department announced Monday that it will restrict visa access for over 100 Nicaraguan officials and their family members following the death...

El Salvador Tourism Boom Puts Visitor Goal Ahead of Schedule

El Salvador’s tourism growth is moving faster than the country’s own official targets. After years of being seen internationally through the lens of violence...

Costa Rica vs England Preview: Prediction, Team News and Lineups

Costa Rica will close its June international window on Wednesday with one of the toughest tests available: England at Inter&Co Stadium in Orlando. The...

Ivory Coast Beats Ecuador as Germany Hits Seven at the World Cup

Amad Diallo hit a 90th-minute winner to give Ivory Coast a dramatic 1-0 victory over Ecuador, the standout moment on a high-scoring fourth day...

Costa Rica Says Ocean Conservation Must Benefit Fishing Communities

Costa Rica used a major international environmental finance meeting in Uzbekistan to present a marine conservation message built around coastal communities, fishing families and...
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