No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeArchiveFolks Gasping for Air in Beachtowns’ Dust-Up

Folks Gasping for Air in Beachtowns’ Dust-Up

Residents of Malpaís and Santa Teresa, in the Pacific province of Puntarenas, are fed up with the dust.

The two neighboring towns, which harbor voracious surfing communities, have dealt with the problem since their inception. But residents say the problem has worsened because of increasing development, traffic and a new road improvement project that started last November.

People commonly wear bandanas as they traverse the area’s unpaved roads, riding on motorbikes or four-wheel all-terrain vehicles, to avoid inhaling all the dirt.

Because of the dust, some foreigners have already abandoned the area and returned to their native countries.

Among them are U.S. citizens Peter and Kiki Smiley.

“My husband and I left Malpaís this past Jan. 8 after five years living in Costa Rica,” states an e-mail from Kiki Smiley. “I moved to Costa Rica in very good health and I left with chronic bronchitis from the dust on the road that destroyed the front of our and many of our neighbor’s properties.”

Italian Gabriela Albisetti said the dust has destroyed her business, La Bella Napoli restaurant, in Malpaís.

“You have to clean every half-hour,” she said. “With all this dust, you can’t work and you can’t cook.”

As part of a $600,000 road-improvement project largely funded by a preferential loan from the German government, workers also cut down trees to widen the roads to 14 meters.

Albisetti said this was unnecessary and damaged her business because the trees protected her restaurant from the dust. She has since put up a protest sign, demanding her trees be replanted.

Malpaís Mayor Eladio Cortés said that is not going to happen, and he pleads for the public to be patient.

“They don’t have the right to deny the road project, and the law states municipal streets should be 14 meters in width,” he said. “I know there is a lot of dust now, but sometimes you have to suffer for a while before you get something better. I’m sorry for the residents, but it is a project that had to be done.”

Workers have almost finished the road widening portion of the project, which runs the 13 kilometers from Malpaís to Manzanillo beach, engineer José Eduardo Barahona said.

Barahona, who works for the German Technical Cooperation Agency and is in charge of seeing the loan money is being well spent, said the second phase – laying down base-course on the roads – would start soon and be finished by the end of April.

Base-course is a stone material finer than gravel that will be watered down and compacted by construction equipment.

Once this process is finished, the dust should be greatly decreased, Barahona said.

 

Trending Now

Nicaragua Hosts Historic 2025 AmeriCup Basketball Tournament

The 2025 AmeriCup, the men’s basketball Copa América, tips off this Friday in Nicaragua, marking the most significant international sporting event in the country’s...

Costa Rica Drivers Face Yearlong Delays as Tárcoles Bridge Undergoes Repairs

Those who frequently use the South Coast Highway, near the Tárcoles river, will have to be more patient.  Repair works have started on the...

Guatemala Prisons Erupt in Violence With Guards and Workers Taken Hostage

Gang members rioted this Friday in two prisons in Guatemala and took several guards and civilian employees hostage, a week after uprisings in which...

Costa Rica Issues Green Weather Alert as Heavy Rains Expected

The National Emergency Commission (CNE) has declared a green weather alert across Costa Rica due to the expected increase in rainfall over the coming...

Costa Rica National Parks to Measure Tourism Impact

Costa Rica will now be able to measure the impact of tourism in its national parks, thanks to innovative environmental technology from The NeverRest...

El Salvador Fires School Leaders After Bukele Shares Gang Video

The Minister of Education ordered the dismissal of the director and deputy director of a public institute shown in a video shared by President...
Avatar
spot_img
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Rocking Chait
Costa Rica Travel

Latest News from Costa Rica