BIBAK lot as pay parking site pushed as cars congest Baguio
>> Monday, April 1, 2019
By Dexter A. See
BAGUIO
CITY – Mayor Mauricio G. Domogan urged the technical working group preparing
the comprehensive master development plan for the 5,000 square-meter Bontoc-Ifugao-Benguet-Apayao-Kalinga
(BIBAK) property here along Harrison Road to allow the temporary use of the
area as a pay parking site to provide additional parking spaces within the
central business district to address increasing volume of motor vehicles flocking
to the city.
The mayor wrote regional
director Ralph Pablo of the Cordillera office of the Department of Environment
and Natural Resources and regional director Roland P. Calde of the Cordillera
office of the National Commission on Indigenous Peoples and TWG to decide
whether to allow temporary use of the feasible portions of the BIBAK property
as temporary parking area while awaiting completion of the master development
plan and funds for development of the property.
“It has been over a year
since the illegal structures in the area were demolished, but there are still
no significant improvements that were undertaken, thus, it might be good if the
vacant space will still be utilized as a temporary pay parking area to help
provide our motorists with parking spaces when going around the city,” Domogan
said.
He said that it will be
the TWG that will manage the operation of the pay parking area or it will
authorize the local government to do so, but what is important is for the
feasible portions of the property to be opened as temporary parking spaces
while awaiting the completion of the desired master development plan and the
implementation of the agreed development of the property.
According to him, once
the TWG renders a favorable action on his request, he will task personnel of
the City Engineering Office to assess feasible areas of the property that could
be temporarily levelled for the pay parking area.
Domogan
said it was difficult to evict the informal settlers in the property so it is
best to have continuous government activity in the area to prevent informal
settlers from settling in and hinder the implementation of future development
projects in the future.
Earlier, the area was
proposed to be converted into a one-stop government center for government
agencies that do not have permanent sites for their regional offices pool their
resources to put up a multi-storey structure that will accommodate their said
offices, aside from using the same as a cultural center.
The BIBAK property is
part of Original Certificate of Title (OCT) No. 1 under the name of the
Republic of the Philippines where dormitories were constructed that served as
lodging for college students in the city coming from the Cordillera.
Domogan said he hoped
TWG members will agree to his proposal so the property will be used for pay
parking purposes.
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