Who really owns the Asinhydros?
>> Monday, August 5, 2013
LIGHT AT
THE END OF THE TUNNEL
Roger Sinot
The
current row between Baguio City government and the Tadiangan-Nangalisan Hydro
Ancestral Landowners Association, Inc. (TNHALA) brings to mind a scene about a
very sleepy and yawning lion that has a hard time staying on his feet faced a
very determined mouse. The lion pounds away the mouse with his gloves at his
numbed foe’s feet.
The
city government is eager to have the rusty and dysfunctional Asin facilities
bided out. It bided out the facility for three times but failed, after
operating it from 2007 to 2012. The city is apparently busy figuring out now the
huge profits it could generate in the future. Unfortunately, for the poor
landowners of Asin whose lots are host to the electric plants and traversed by
giant plume lines are being sadly ignored even with a Compromise Agreement.
They were dismissed as insignificant elements. On the contrary, the TNHALA is a
sleepy yawning lion.
The
Asin hydros were built by then Mayor Eusebius G. Halsema who was on different
occasions, Baguio mayor, city engineer and Benguet district engineer during his
17-year stint in government from 1920 to 1937. While the city government
is treating the small landowners insignificantly, it is also in for a
bombshell. Halsema who was city engineer, mayor and Benguet district engineer,
not necessarily in that order, built the hydro-electric plants to electrify the
gold mines and timber yards that were all located in Benguet, and eventually
supplied power for the city’s government buildings.
If
so, then it was probable that funds from Benguet were used in the construction
of the Asinhydros. It is unthinkable that the city funded the construction of
the Asin hydros that powered the Benguet mines. It makes no sense. In the same
manner, constructing the famous Mountain Trail by Halsema and opening it to
motor vehicles in 1930 while he was mayor of Baguio is absurd.
To
think of how Baguio came to claim ownership of the Asinhydros is perplex. But
to speculate, it may have been forcibly harnessed for use by the Japanese
forces during their occupation of the city in World War 2, and erroneously had
stuck in the minds of city officials ever since that the AsinHydros was a owned
by the city. Besides, the few people who might have known who the real owners
of the hydro-electric plants were might not have made it after the war. In
fact, nobody has seen documents that showed that the city owned the facilities,
much less the area where they were built.
One
other explanation is that the hydro-electric plants could have been fixed by
the liberating American soldiers who stayed in Baguio rather than in Benguet
after the war, so that ownership subtly, with no fanfare, changed hands to the
disadvantage of the shy and withdrawn Benguet folk. This may not be proven as I
was not yet a living soul at that time, although I am quite sure that people
will outrun each other to the library and the archives in a bid to get to the
truth.
Assuming
the Asinhydros were constructed under the BOT scheme (build-operate-transfer),
its operations that enriched the city for a time should have been transferred a
long time ago to the LGUs concerned, but that was not the case. Today, the LGU
members of the BLISTT (Baguio, La Trinidad, Itogon, Sablan, Tuba, Tublay)
should rethink of their positions and what Baguio has contributed to their
existence or the other way around. Tuba and its concerned barangays should
consider planning about owning the Asinhydros, after all the facilities that
have yet to be proven as under the ownership of Baguio, are inside their
territory. Happy trails to all 2ba boys and girls!
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