No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeArchiveICE Faces Record Fine for Charging Unauthorized Fees

ICE Faces Record Fine for Charging Unauthorized Fees

The Costa Rican Electricity Institute (ICE) faces a fine for unauthorized service fees charged to the telecommunications company Radiomensajes, the Public Services Regulatory Authority (ARESEP) reported this week.

The fine, of more than ¢1.5 billion ($2.6 million), is the largest amount ever imposed on a public institution in Costa Rica.

According to ARESEP, from Oct. 1, 2005 to Jan. 31, 2009, ICE overcharged Radiomensajes for use of a 900 number. Though ICE set up the 900 number for the telecommunications company, ARESEP reported that over the three-year span ICE withheld 28 percent of the earnings generated by the phone service.

The authorized amount of the tax that could be withheld for the service was 3.86 percent.

Regulatory officials estimated that the amount of earnings retained by ICE totaled ¢305,137,688 ($535,329). ICE must reimburse Radiomensajes the withheld amount, as well as pay the fine to the National Treasury, which is five times the amount of money withheld, ARESEP said in a news release. ICE, Costa Rica’s longtime telephone monopoly, is expected to appeal the fine in the

Administrative Contention Court

.

If the issue is brought before the court, it will mark the second time ICE has disputed regulatory intervention by ARESEP in the past two months. In September, ARESEP proposed a decrease in electricity rates through the remainder of the year due to savings earned by the reduced cost of fossil fuels. ICE disputed the rate reduction in the

Administrative Contention Court

, though the court ruled in favor of ARESEP, and electricity rates were lowered as of Sept. 10.

–Adam Williams

 

Trending Now

A Look Back: Remembering the Costa Rica Fourth of July Picnic in 1965

Fifty-seven years ago in July was simply unforgettable. Sure, I was all of 6 years old, and had only just begun to have my...

German Resident Found Killed on Guanacaste Farm as OIJ Investigates

A German woman who lived in Costa Rica was found dead with stab wounds inside a farmhouse in the canton of Santa Cruz, and...

Costa Rica Faces Hotter Weekend as Sahara Dust Reduces Rainfall

A plume of Saharan dust is helping bring hotter, drier and hazier weather to Costa Rica this weekend, with forecasters warning of reduced rainfall,...

Costa Rica Carries Out Second Mass Deportation Flight

Costa Rica carried out its second mass aerial deportation of foreign nationals today, sending 26 people to Colombia and Ecuador in an operation...

U.S. Lawmakers Urge Release of Salvadoran Lawyer Ruth López

Nine Democratic members of the U.S. Congress sent a letter to Secretary of State Marco Rubio asking him to press for the immediate release...

Costa Rica Reviews PriceSmart Site After Archaeological Material Found

Work at a PriceSmart construction site in Santo Domingo de Heredia could be temporarily stopped after archaeological material was found during earth movement, prompting...

Landslides Keep Costa Rica’s Route 32 Closed

Route 32, the main highway linking the Central Valley with the Caribbean province of Limón, remains closed in several sections after landslides triggered by...

Long Lines Hit Costa Rica Airport After Midday Flight Surge

Long lines formed Saturday at the departure immigration area of Juan Santamaría International Airport after a heavy midday wave of flights pushed thousands of...

Costa Rica Rescue Team Celebrates Miracle Survival in Venezuela Quake Zone

A Venezuelan security guard found alive by Costa Rican rescuers after last week’s deadly earthquakes has been pulled from the rubble after eight days...
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