No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeArchiveDecree Prohibits Public Access to Enviro Records

Decree Prohibits Public Access to Enviro Records

An executive decree issued by President Oscar Arias and Environment Minister Roberto Dobles last week shut off public access to public documents.
The decree, published in the official government newspaper La Gaceta on Feb. 5, voids long-standing public access to case files in the Environment Tribunal.
“It’s outrageous,” said Alejandro Delgado, a lawyer for the Costa Rican Journalism Association and the Institute for Press Freedom (IPLEX). “It impedes, without any justification, citizen access to documentation which is obviously of public interest.”
According to Article 21 of the decree, only those directly involved in a case, their representatives or any accredited “lawyer” in the country can view the case files.
The press and the public are excluded. The decision marks an abrupt change from the tribunal’s original 1996 reglamento, or bylaw, which states that such files are “considered public and accessible, for information purposes, for any individual.”
Delgado said the decree was blatantly unconstitutional.
“How does one decide who the two sides are, and who should be privy to information in these cases? For example, if a hotel is dumping sewage in a neighboring town or beach, shouldn’t the entire town, or the neighbors, be entitled to these documents?” he said.
Eduardo Ulibarri, president of the press institute and former director of the country’s premier Spanish-language daily, La Nación, sent a letter to Dobles on Wednesday, calling the decree an “attack on our freedom of access to public information.”
In the letter, Ulibarri cites articles 29 and 30 of the Constitution, which “guarantee” access to “issues of public interest.”
Ulibarri said the decree threatens Arias’ “commitment to transparency.” Fernando Guier, the country’s bestknown advocate of press freedom, called the timing unusual.
The decree comes in the midst of a series of Tico Times reports revealing both the Hotel Occidental Allegro Papagayo and neighboring Occidental Grand Papagayo had been accused of dumping sewage illegally into the ocean.
Both hotels are part of the high-profile, government-run Papagayo Tourism Project, which officials have long touted as “ecofriendly.”
The decree was signed on June 20 but did not enter into law until its publication in La Gaceta on Feb. 5 – the day after The Tico Times requested documents pertaining to the Grand Papagayo case. The newspaper was denied the records.
José Lino Chávez, president of the Environmental Tribunal, insisted the law has “always been that way” and assured the tribunal “was working to provide better access to the press.”
 

Trending Now

Costa Rica Picnic Festival 2026 Lineup Headlined by Christina Aguilera, Maná and Nodal

Picnic Festival organizers revealed the lineup for the 2026 edition yesterday, setting the stage for two days of live music at Centro de Eventos...

WTA Crowns Gauff-Zheng Rome Semifinal as 2025 Match of the Year

The WTA has named the grueling Rome semifinal between Coco Gauff and Qinwen Zheng as its 2025 Match of the Year, a fan-voted honor...

Honduras Starts Partial Recount in Tight Presidential Election Backed by Trump

Honduras electoral officials started a partial recount of votes yesterday from the November 30 presidential election. The race remains close, with right-wing candidate Nasry...

Honduras Sticks with Nighttime Border Shutdowns, Complicating Travel for Visitors

Travelers heading to Honduras face ongoing hurdles at land borders, where officials shut down crossings each night. The country's immigration service halts operations for...

Costa Rica Approves U.S. Coast Guard Boats for 2026 Anti-Drug Operations

Lawmakers in Costa Rica's Legislative Assembly have given the green light for up to 195 U.S. Coast Guard vessels to access the country's ports...

Honduras Waits Two Weeks for Final Election Result as Recount Dispute Drags On

Hondurans have now gone two weeks without knowing who their next president will be, as the country waits for a special count that will...
Avatar
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Travel

Latest News from Costa Rica