Tarrazú (canton)

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Template:Short description Template:Expand Spanish Script error: No such module "Settlement short description".Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Script error: No such module "Check for conflicting parameters".Expression error: Unexpected < operator. Tarrazú is the fifth canton in the province of San José in Costa Rica.[1][2] The head city of the canton is San Marcos. It is part of Los Santos Zone, together with Dota and León Cortés Castro.

History

The canton was established by a legislative decree of 7 August 1868.[3] It was part of the Desamparados canton by that time.

Government

Mayor

According to Costa Rica's Municipal Code, mayors are elected every four years by the population of the canton.[4] As of the latest municipal elections in 2024, the Social Christian Unity Party candidate, Fernando Portuguez Parra, was elected mayor of the canton with 50.15% of the votes, with Marjorie Castro Barrantes and Alejandro Javier Bonilla Herrera as first and second vice mayors, respectively.[5]

Mayors of Tarrazú since the 2002 elections[6]
Period Name Party
2002–2006 José Rodolfo Naranjo Naranjo File:Bandera del Partido Unidad Social Cristiana.svg PUSC
2006–2010 Ivan Saurez Sandí File:Bandera de Partido Liberación Nacional.svg PLN
2010–2016 Bernardo Barboza Picado
2016–2020 Ana Lorena Rovira Gutiérrez File:Bandera del Partido Unidad Social Cristiana.svg PUSC
2020–2024
2024–2028 Fernando Portuguez Parra

Municipal Council

Like the mayor and vice mayors, members of the Municipal Council (called Script error: No such module "Lang".) are elected every four years. Tarrazú's Municipal Council has 5 seats for regidores and their substitutes, who can participate in meetings but not vote unless the owning regidor (Script error: No such module "Lang".) is absent.[4] The Municipal Council's composition for the 2024–2028 period is as follows:

Current composition of the Municipal Council of Tarrazú after the 2024 municipal elections[7]
File:Costa Rica Tarrazú Concejo Municipal 2024.svg
Political parties in the Municipal Council of Tarrazú
Political party Regidores
Owner Substitute
File:Bandera del Partido Unidad Social Cristiana.svg Social Christian Unity Party (PUSC) 3 Keisy Daniela Gutiérrez Valverde María Victoria Naranjo Abarca
Carlos Luis Abarca Cruz Juan Diego Blanco Valverde
Melania Chaves Chanto Karen Lizeth Vargas Navarro
File:Bandera de Partido Liberación Nacional.svg National Liberation Party (PLN) 2 Karol Tatiana Navarro Monge María Rosario Umaña Retana
Wilmer Alvarado Fonseca Isaac Facundo Madrigal Vargas

Geography

File:Tarrazu mountains near Quepos Costa Rica.JPG
Pacific Ocean in the distance, as seen from Tarrazú.

Tarrazú has an area of Script error: No such module "convert". and a mean elevation of Script error: No such module "convert"..[8][1]

The Pirrís River (also known as Parrita River) establishes much of the northern boundary of the three-pronged canton, which reaches south across the Coastal Mountain Range to its border with the canton of Quepos in Puntarenas Province.

Tarrazú is located about Script error: No such module "convert". south of the capital, San José, in a pristine valley surrounded by mountains that are part of the Talamanca Sierra in southern Costa Rica. Downtown San Marcos is Script error: No such module "convert". above sea level but is surrounded by peaks as high as Script error: No such module "convert". above sea level.

Districts

The canton of Tarrazú is subdivided into three districts:

  1. San Marcos
  2. San Lorenzo
  3. San Carlos

Demographics

Template:CR Census population Tarrazú had an estimated population of 17,810 in 2022, an increase from its 16,280 inhabitants at the time of the 2011 census.[9][10]

In 2022, Tarrazú had a Human Development Index of 0.668.[11]

Transportation

Road transportation

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Economy

Highland coffee is the main source of income of local people. However, tourism and avocado production are of increased importance. During the months of December, January and February, population increases three-fold due to harvest time. San Marcos, the biggest town in the region, has become the center of economic activity.

More recently, the Costa Rican Institute of Electricity has invested millions of dollars in the Pirrís Hydro Dam, scheduled to start generating energy by March 2011. The Hydro Dam is now the highest structure of its kind in Central America and will be key to the economic development of the region, not only in the highlands but the coastal regions of Quepos and Parrita.

The region is deeply dependent on remittances from emigres who live in the United States, namely New Jersey. Few households in the region do not have a family member who lives and works in the United States. This outmigration has led to an influx of thousands of Panamanian laborers to help realize the annual coffee harvest.[12]

Tarrazú, particularly the San Lorenzo area, is felt to produce the most desirable coffee in Costa Rica.[13] Finca Palmilera coffee is grown here.[14] In November 2012, it was the most expensive coffee sold in Starbucks coffee shops in the United States.[15]

References

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  12. Kordick, Carmen. The Saints of Progress: Coffee, Migration, and Costa Rican National Identity. University of Alabama Press, 2019.
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  14. "Costa Rica Finca Palmilera", Roy Street Coffee and Tea. Retrieved 16 November 2012.
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Template:Provinces and cantons of Costa Rica Template:Authority control