By
Dexter A. See
BAGUIO CITY – Concerned government agencies
and the City Government of Baguio should make the appropriate master plan of
the 5,000-square meter Bontoc-Ifugao-Benguet-Apayao-Kalinga (BIBAK) property
along Harrison Road here to prevent its repeated encroachment, City Mayor
Mauricio G. Domogan said.
Domogan, who attended
the fourth quarter meeting of the Regional Development Council (RDC) in the
Cordillera held in the nearby capital town of La Trinidad, Benguet, expressed
his gratitude to the region’s policy-making body for passing the appropriate
resolution supporting the demolition of the illegal structures within the
property.
The mayor cited the Department
of Environment and Natural Resources for its position that the occupants of the
BIBAK property have no personality to occupy the identified public land and
that their structures do not have the required building and occupancy permits.
“We should come out
with a master plan for the property as soon as possible after the demolition of
the illegal structures to prevent the area from being squatted upon by informal
settlers and to make sure that the area will be used for its prescribed purpose
to house the dormitory of students coming from the different parts of the
Cordillera,” Domogan told the RDC-CAR members.
He told the RDC-CAR
that the 60 illegal structures in the property will be demolished by the middle
part of January next year.
The local court denied
the two petitions for the issuance of a temporary restraining order and
subsequent writ of preliminary injunction to prevent demolition, thus, there is
no longer a legal impediment in implementing the demolition order.
Domogan reported the
Cordillera offices of the National Commission on Indigenous Peoples, the
DENR-CAR and the local government are now pooling resources for dismantling of
illegal structures.
The mayor said
adoption of the master plan will guarantee full use of the property for its prescribed
purpose and will prevent informal settlers from again intruding in the area for
the benefit of students from the different parts of the region wanting to study
in the city or in this capital town.
Despite not being
qualified for a relocation site, the mayor revealed the local government is
helping the affected families look for a relocation area as recommended by the
Presidential Commission on the Urban Poor (PCUP).
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