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Driving in Costa Rica: New Driving Restrictions For Peak Hours in the San Jose Area
By Explore Costa Rica Staff
Jun 26, 2008, 06:41
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Driving in Costa Rica: New Driving Restrictions For Peak Hours in the San Jose Area
New driving restrictions are set to come into effect today that will keep certain motorists from driving at peak hours around the southern perimeter of San Jose.
In order to cut down on traffic, Costa Rica's government has set new driving restrictions in the Central Valley.
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| Driving in Costa Rica |
Drivers of oversized vehicles will also be prohibited from traveling through Costa Rica's capital or on certain major highways. Violators of either decree could face charges of 5,000 colones ($9.70) fine.
Meanwhile, the President Oscar Arias administration hopes to push through legislation in coming weeks that would eliminate the tax on diesel and shift it to regular and super.
The same bill would also double the tax on some diesel vehicles and transfer ¢10 billion (about $19.4 million) to the National Oil Refinery, making up for revenue lost when the government suspended a proposed ¢85/liter hike in diesel prices.
Light freight, transport and special equipment vehicles that run on diesel would be excluded from the new tax.
The newest peak hour restrictions will be enforced on the Circunvalación, the route running the southern perimeter of San Jose, and will be based on hour, day of the week and the last digit of a driver's license plate (see map and chart).
Vehicles with plates ending with a 1 or 2 are forbidden on Monday, those with a 3 or 4 on Tuesday, 5 and 6 on Wednesday, 7 and 8 on Thursday, and 9 and 0 on Friday. The schedule runs from 6-8:30 a.m. and from 4:30-7 p.m.
Overweight vehicles can no longer travel through downtown San Jose, nor along Route 32 (Braulio Carrillo), General Canas Highway (Alajuela), Bernardo Soto Highway (San Ramon), Prospero Fernandez Highway (Santa Ana), and Florencio del Castillo Highway (Cartago).
Presidency Minister Rodrigo Arias said Costa Ricans are living in a “true national emergency” due to ever-rising oil prices. He urged legislators to work together to pass the bill within the next four weeks.
The government is pitching the diesel tax cut as a means to help the agricultural, industrial and transport sectors, as well as the 80 percent of Costa Ricans who use public transportation on a daily basis for work.
Should the bill fail, Arias said, the Public Services Regulatory Authority will be forced to raise fuel prices across the board.
“Everyone will have to pay equally,” Arias said. “The government insists that we protect the people with the least resources.”
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