Baguio dump set to be closed after court order
>> Monday, September 3, 2012
BAGUIO CITY -- The Irisan dump here, where six persons died in a trash slide last year is set to be permanently closed.
This,
after the former special sixth division of the
Court of Appeals directed the
Baguio City government to permanently cease and desist from operating the dump.
It
granted in a 13-page decision, the motion for rendition of consent decree
submitted by petitioner Benguet Rep. Ronald Cosalan and several other concerned
individuals, including national artist for visual arts Benedicto Cabrera and
respondents led by Mayor Mauricio Domogan.
In
their joint motion, the two parties informed the appellate court that they have
agreed to settle the case amicably after the respondents manifested that they
are not opposing the issuance of the writ of kalikasan.
The
CA noted that it found the terms and conditions embodied in the amicable
settlement submitted by the parties in accordance “with law, morals, public
order and public policy and in order to protect the right of the people to a
balance and healthful ecology.”
“That
the city of Baguio, its officials, and all those who may hereafter succeed them
shall abide by the local government’s declaration of closure of the facility
and thereafter, implement and establish at the soonest possible time, a waste
disposal system at a remote location which shall not be where the closed Irisan
facility is situated...and, in the interim, adopt all measures that shall
ensure a clean, sanitary and safe environment to the residents of the areas
affected and its environs,” stated the ruling penned by Associate Justice
Ricardo Rosario.
Associate
Justices Rosmari Carandang and Japar Dimaampao concurred with the ruling.
The
CA ruling, in effect, dissolved the temporary protection order that the Supreme
Court issued on Jan. 17.
The
appellate court also directed the local officials to comply with its announced
plan to convert the dump into an environment-friendly eco-park.
The
Baguio City government, the CA said, is mandated to submit report on its
compliance with the consent decree within six months from its issuance, and
every six months thereafter until the judgment has b een fully implemented
The
CA also directed that Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR)
and its attached agencies and all other concerned government entities involved
in securing and protecting the environment to strictly monitor the compliance
of the parties with the consent decree.
It
said government agencies are also tasked to submit a monitoring report within
three months from the issuance of the consent decree.
0 comments:
Post a Comment