LETTERS
FROM THE AGNO
BAGUIO CITY -- Last
month, lawmakers at the Baguio City hall “violated” an ordinance that the
legislative body in 2012 passed. Ordinance No. 13 of 2012 amended the Trade
Fair Ordinance of 1994.
Ordinance of 1994
prohibits trade fairs in all city-owned or city-managed parks and
government-owned and controlled properties and facilities.
In their “violation,”
the city council approved in a resolution the request of the HRAB (Hotel and
Restaurant Association of Baguio) to allow stalls to operate a Christmas bazaar
from December 1 to January 1, 2017 at the Melvin Jones football field.
That comes to a total
of 30 days that certainly violates Ordinance No. 13 of 2012, which clearly says
that “trade fairs should be conducted for a period not exceeding 15 days…” On
some occasions, lawmakers are just like us who need to review Arithmetic.
HRAB said the
Christmas bazaar “aims to raise funds for the visit of some 24 Miss Universe
candidates and their assistants next year,” as the once in a lifetime visit to
this resort city costs over P30 M.
The project is under
HRAB and Anthony De Leon (ADL), GM of the Baguio Country Club, and the trade
fair is supposed to be an activity counterpart by the city. The Melvin Jones
bazaar would rent out 738 stalls P70, 868.56 per stall. That is a collected
amount of more than P52 M in a month’s time, no sweat.
Check your
calculators… P52 M collection minus P30 M expenses. Now, into whose pocket will
the P20 M loose change go? Again, we are reminded that the organizers of the
yearly Panagbenga have yet to show the people of Baguio a public audit.
For hard-nosed
businessmen, the idea is very good. Imagine in so short a time, one is able to
collect easy money just because it is backed by a city council resolution. But
don’t blink. I may be down when it comes to Arithmetic but I saw who the real
and direct beneficiaries are.
They are the 5-star
hotels in the city – most especially BCC and CJH where the Miss Universe
candidates and hundreds of their aides composed of their managers, immediate
relatives and make-up artists would be billeted.
A week after the
city council approved their resolution allowing HRAB at Melvin Jones,
businesswoman Elen Lao restrained the holding of the trade fair and filed for
an injunction.
Fortunately, Judge
Maria Ligaya Itliong-Rivera of Regional Trial Court Branch 6 granted both
petitions that stopped the proposed Christmas Bazaar. Imagine the smiles that
stopped radiating and the long faces of the proponents, thanks to Elen Lao.
We, the public are the
losers. Elen Lao argued that the public and the residents of Baguio would be
deprived of the use of the park. She said that Melvin Jones football field is a
public place that is maintained with peoples’ taxes and the revenue that is
collected from its operation “becomes public funds, where the disbursement is
imbued with public interest.”
In addition, other
businesses in the city may lose business opportunities due to unfair
competition as a result of the conduct of the Christmas bazaar. Imagine 738
stall operators who do not have to exert extra effort or wait in line to
process business permits.
All they have to do is
pay the HRAB P70,868 then sell their wares. What is expected is that even
before the traders finish the month, they will claim that they were unable to
recoup their capital and request for an extension.
If that is tolerated
as they always are, then goodbye Melvin Jones. We will see the trade fair go
through Panagbenga, until the summer rains come.
The grassy football
grounds, the only free space and environment that the public can enjoy, will be
as muddy as the Christmas bazaar organizers’ minds. And its repair will be paid
by peoples’ taxes because it is doubtful if the organizers will pay for it.
Certainly, as
Petitioner Elen Lao pointed out, Burnham Park is a public place and cannot be
used for the benefit of a private entity such as HRAB. That does not need to be
said over and over again because that is common sense, unless the organizers
have none of that.
The HRAB argued that
petitioner Elen Lao is in no position to oppose the project even as a taxpayer
because “no public fund will be disbursed to be used in the event and nobody
will benefit from the activity,” hence it is not covered by the city ordinance.
Tell that to the
marines! It was Mayor Domogan himself who clarified that the “bazaar is a
city-led activity to augment the funds needed for the upcoming Miss Universe.”
Hence, there are public funds to be used in the Miss Universe candidates’
visit.
It was clear in Judge
Itliong-Rivera’s decision that the bazaar violated EO 695 because it was not
approved by the Secretary of Tourism and revenues and collections from the
specific use of Burnham Park shall accrue to the treasury of the city.
The money shall first
be used for the operation, management and maintenance of the Park and any net
profit not needed for management, operation and maintenance of Burnham Park
shall be shared equally by the City and the PTA, the court decision added.
Even Vice-Mayor Ed
Bilog said the Melvin Jones bazaar violates the trade fair ordinance and other
national laws. He said further, the grant of the petition is not only for the
protection of the laws and ordinances but for the parks and the environment.
What is more
interesting in the ruling is that part which stated: “First and foremost, it is
the Sangguniang Panglungsod who passed the trade fair ordinance. They must be
the first to uphold it. Second, if ‘rare opportunity’ can be a ground to
disregard the law, there would be disorder.”
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