CDO hurts public service in Mountain Province
>> Tuesday, May 5, 2015
by March Fianza
On the road to Lang-ay
in Bontoc, Art Alladiw of Inter Aksyon kept on sending text messages about the
Katagoan caravan that was launched as part of the Lang-ay festival on April 24,
2015 to raise funds for dialysis patients who trace their roots to Mountain
Province.
The caravan started at
7 AM passing the towns of Sabangan, Bauko, Tadian, Sagada and Bontoc before
proceeding to the eastern town of Barlig.
“Katagoan” literally
means to “survive or support life”. Art said, the Katagoan Caravan raised
almost P400,000 from support tickets sold through the mayors of the various
towns of this province in coordination with Mountain Province Rep. Maximo Dalog.
Of the amount raised, some P70,000.00 was pledged by those living or working
outside the country who trace their ancestry in Mountain Province.
Around 66 dialysis
patients will benefit from the funds. Gov. Leonard Mayaen said that last year,
two dialysis machines were opened at the Bontoc General Hospital to cater to
the needs of patients who no longer have to travel to Baguio for treatment.
Lawyer Kissack Gabaen
who joined the Caravan For A Cause with his martial artists said, treatment for
dialysis patients should be supported through collective efforts. Apparently, Gabaen
knows the real situation because he lost his wife last year due to kidney
illness.
In Bontoc, Mountain
Province, newsmen were told that the Cease and Desist Order issued on April 25,
2013 by Dr. Maria
Serena I. Diokno, Chair of the National Historical Commission
of the Philippines, baffled other provincial and local government officials
because in the first place it was NHCP that gave its approval to the project a
year earlier on March 23, 2012.
The NHCP performed a
somersault and a flip-flop. Governor Leonard G. Mayaen said, “NHCP went against
itself when it issued the CDO.”Not only did the
unexpected issuance of the CDO suspend impending reconstruction of the half
front portion of the old and dilapidated provincial capitol building of Mountain
Province, it has effectively prolonged the agony of government workers and
their clients here, causing unnecessary injury to the smooth delivery of public
service.
The NHCP hinged its
CDO on the “inspection” of a technical group that visited Bontoc 15 days
earlier before the CDO was issued. The team’s report apparently talked about an
unauthorized demolition of the original brickwall foundation of the building.
But if one goes to
examine for himself the demolished facade of the building, you will not find
bricks but cement that was designed to look like bricks by masons and painters
hired by then Governor Alfredo “Binky” Lamen Jr. to repair the dilapidated
portions of the antique building during his term in 1989.
The NHCP said the
capitol has not been formally declared as a heritage and cultural site, but
Section 5 of RA 10066 considers all structures more than 50 years old as
Important Cultural Property. Gov. Mayaen agrees with the NHCP on Sec. 5 of
RA1006.
The front portion of
the old two-storey wooden capitol structure was built by the Americans sometime
in 1907 while the back portion was built sometime around 1935-1940. But there
is no longer a 50-year old or more capitol building of Mountain Province to
speak of because repairs and constructions have altered the original form of
the building.
Mayaen cited that in
1989 onwards, the brick columns were changed into concrete and were finished
with brick-like designs; the back of the capitol building was demolished in
2007 paving for the construction of two new four-floor concrete buildings; the
floors, walls and ceilings of the old building were replaced with concrete,
marble or new material.
Still, the CDO came
which according to Diokno, the suspension on the renovation works will be
lifted “only upon the written authority of this Commission”.
Effectively,
provincial employees now have to suffer for a longer period as important
frontline service offices had to move and exchange rooms with other offices in
order to squeeze in more government workers. For example, the tourism and
provincial administrator’s office share a room, the Public Information Office
shares with the Social Welfare Office, while the PSWDO shares with security
services office since half of the front of the capitol building was demolished
in April of 2013.
Talking to old friends
in Bontoc, I was told that people in MP know, including the petitioners, that
rain leaks through many parts of the roof, and that explains the presence of a
water pails in the offices.
The renovation project
was tied to the past administration’s honest assessment of the true sad state
of the old building that it is a fire hazard and the wooden second floor creeks
even when stepped on by a medium built individual. Vibration in the building
can be felt when vehicles pass the road and the grounds as well as the second
floor level elevation are one meter lower than the floor levels of the newly
constructed buildings at the back.
All over the country,
LGUs are constructing bigger office buildings to cope with an increasing
population of government workers. But here is another honest assessment of the
true sad state of some people - they petition agencies without providing
alternative solutions, but for the sake that important projects are suspended.
Selfish move or crab mentality?
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