Chill complements flower fest in Baguio
>> Friday, January 31, 2014
BEHIND
THE SCENES
Alfred
P. Dizon
BAGUIO CITY – The
chill in this summer capital is getting colder by the day, but still, tourists
are coming in.
The cold is
bringing brisk business to this city, particularly to underground retail
“wagwag” (ukay-ukay) business of winter clothes and apparel even as
preparations are being set in time for the 19th staging of
Panagbenga or Flower Festival.
Hotel cash
registers are ringing and even drugstore attendants are telling customers they
have run out of lip gloss, an antidote against chapped lips. Jueteng bets are
up and even the friendly neighborhood drug pushers are very busy. Nightspots
are full, but then customers are not clapping that much after every song due to
the cold and would rather huddle in a corner.
The
highland chill may have brought more business to this summer capital but it has
its downside. According to the Environmental Management Bureau–Cordillera, the
cold could worsen air quality.
EMB-CAR
planning division OIC-chief Wilhelmina Lagunilla said the city’s cold weather
could cause pollutants to stay in the air than during the warmer or normal
weather.
On Jan. 19,
Baguio’s temperature dipped to a low of 8.1 degrees, the lowest this year. On
Jan. 18, 1961, Baguio temperature reached a record low of 6.3 degrees.
PAGASA-Baguio
weather specialist Danny Galati said Tuesday’s temperature rose to 10.5
degrees Celsius compared to Monday's 8.4 degrees Celsius.
Lagunilla,
an engineer however said recent studies and air quality monitoring by the
agency showed air pollution is being experienced more during cold
weather.
Pollutants
such as vehicle emission and other sources, she said, are suspended in the air
longer due to the colder weather that may create more pollution in the city and
areas affected by the cold.
She said
colder weather will make the total particulate matter from the source of
pollutants dissipate in the air slower than the usual and these particulates
could be inhaled by residents.
The traffic
congestion at Baguio’s central business district is seen as one of sources of
pollutants particularly during the weekends when the traffic number coding is
lifted and all sorts of vehicles ply the city’s main thoroughfares.
More than a
decade ago, Baguio along with five other major cities in the
country, were found by the World Bank as most polluted locations.
Lagunilla
commended the project of the city to maintain plants and other vegetation as
it is a good intervention in lessening air pollution in the central
business district since the plants can absorb some pollutants such as carbon
monoxide from the vehicle emissions.
PAGASA-Baguio
has said that highland chill, though warming a little bit the coming summer
months, might go on until May because of the tail-end of the cold front.
Baguio
experienced warmer temperatures Tuesday morning at 12.5 degrees Celcius from
8.4 degrees on Monday.
But PAGASA
said the cold front would continue until the end of February since the northeast
monsoon or Amihan blowing from China starts mid-October and ends in March,
while peaking from January to February.
***
This as
Mayor Mauricio Domogan Wednesday reminded private and public personalities
involved in preparations for the Baguio Flower Festival not to allow feuds and
disagreements to mar staging of the most important tourism event of the city.
He said
Panagbenga remains to be a city activity sponsored by both the city government
and the private sector through the Baguio Flower Festival Inc. (BFFI) and its
success through the years was brought on by the teamwork between the two
sectors which if not sustained, may spell disaster for the festival.
The mayor
said he will intervene to resolve disagreements have been brewing between the
BFFI executive committee led by chair Anthony De Leon and vice chair Frederico
Alquiros and some members of the city council to ensure that the activities
will go on smoothly.
“It is not
surprising that some misunderstandings happen at this stage because of miscommunication
but it is just a matter of addressing some concerns to make our teamwork
better. I will talk to the BFFI and the city council to settle this,” he
said.
He said he
will not allow misunderstandings and disagreements to go out of hand and affect
the festival recalling the 2005 edition when two versions were staged because
of the conflict between the two sectors.
“We
will by all means not allow that to happen again. It was embarrassing;
the result was not good for our city,” the mayor said.
The mayor
acknowledged the present disagreement was caused by questions on finances of
the festival.
Councilor
Elmer Datuin who chairs the city council committee on tourism earlier sought
the submission of the financial statement detailing the income and expenses of
the Panagbenga 2012 but this apparently did not sit well with the BFFI.
The mayor
said as a practice, BFFI submits an audit report of the Panagbenga funds
including the P4 million from the city government and those solicited from
private sponsors, donors and earnings from the activities to the Securities and
Exchange Commission. He said the net proceeds are deposited to the BFFI
account for the event’s next staging.
The mayor
said the city government will continue to support the event and the P4 million
annual financial assistance being given
by the city will be sustained, whether the BFFI will ask for it or not.
To clear
matters, all the BFFI may have to do is publish in newspapers an accounting of
its finances. After all Panagbenga is made possible very year due to the help
of private and public sectors like the kids who sing and dance for the main
event rain or shine with families sacrificing for their outfits, some at the
expense of a meal or two.
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