No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeArchiveThousands of Costa Rican farmers march on capital for lower property taxes

Thousands of Costa Rican farmers march on capital for lower property taxes

By Vanessa I. Garnica | Special to The Tico Times

An estimated 8,000 producers representing different agricultural organizations and cooperatives from around Costa Rica traveled by bus – many as far as the northwestern province of Guanacaste and the Southern Zone – to meet in the country’s capital and demand from legislators a decrease in rates outlined by an “alarming” tax law.

Costa Rican farmers marched Tuesday morning from San José’s Central Park to the Legislative Assembly wearing traditional cowboy and fedora hats and holding homemade signs requesting lawmakers discuss and approve bill 18,070, which would decrease the current property tax by 80 percent on land used for agricultural purposes.

“We are here today because the current property taxes that are in place today represent a negative and unnecessary load on farmers, and it is impossible to maintain in the long term,” said Adrián Hernández, board member at Coopelibertad, a coffee cooperative representing more than 2,000 coffee producers in Heredia province, north of the capital. “We are not asking to be tax exempted. However, we want to pay what is fair within the agricultural sector.”

Rain did not deter those present at the march. Many huddled together, shared umbrellas and listened to some of their sector’s national leaders speak from a stage built in front of the assembly. Among them was Guido Vargas, president of UPA Nacional, an organization of small- and medium-sized producers.

Vargas, one of the main organizers of the march, said that he hoped not to come back to San José – previous marches against the 2007 tax reform, which set current property taxes, ended unsuccessfully.

“We are hoping to meet with the president of the assembly today to let him know we need his support to pass bill 18,070,” he said. “We want to defend our rights to keep producing on the land.”

Following the daylong demonstration, lawmakers agreed to give the bill priority for discussion on the assembly floor.

Trending Now

Sabalenka and Rybakina Advance to Australian Open Final After Semifinal Wins

Aryna Sabalenka moved one step closer to her third title at the Australian Open with a straight-sets win over Elina Svitolina in the semifinals...

Costa Rica Mentioned Hundreds of Times in Epstein Files

The U.S. Department of Justice's declassification of the Epstein files has uncovered repeated references to Costa Rica, with our country cited 324 times across...

OAS Applauds Costa Rica Election Success Amid Calls for Finance Overhaul

The Organization of American States (OAS) has given Costa Rica high marks for its national elections on February 1, calling the process transparent and...

Costa Rica’s president-elect takes cabinet post to manage transition

Costa Rica’s president-elect, right-wing politician Laura Fernández, was sworn in on Wednesday as chief of staff to organize the transfer of power, an unprecedented...

Costa Rica President Halts Medical Profile Decree Over Surgery Dispute

President Rodrigo Chaves has put a hold on publishing a decree that sets clear limits on what general practitioners can do in Costa Rica....

Panama rejects China’s threat over annulled port contract in the canal

Panama on Wednesday rejected China’s warning that it would pay a “high price” for annulling the contract that allowed a Hong Kong company to...
Avatar
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Travel

Latest News from Costa Rica