By
Dionisio Dennis, Jr. and Argielynne Gem Ramos
BAGUIO CITY -- City
government employees, the private sector, and residents paid tribute to the “invaluable
contribution” of outgoing Mayor Mauricio Domogan, who served the city for more
than 30 years in different positions.
“He is
known as the 'janitor', the city’s longest-serving executive, 30 years, who led
us all in the city to make Baguio rise again and progress,” said Association of
City Executives (ACEx) president and budget officer Leticia Clemente during the
tribute.
Domogan was
cited for leading the people of Baguio in rising from the 1990 quake
devastation.
“All the
departments have been very supportive of his advocacies and programs as they
would and will always do for all administration before or after him. He too
reciprocated, the reason why there were many innovations that have taken off
the ground sustaining good public services at all times,” Clemente said.
Domogan
joined the city government as councilor from 1998 to 1992.
In the 1992
polls, he ran and won as vice mayor but it did not take a day before he was appointed
as OIC-mayor after the Commission on Elections issued a disqualification order
against former mayor Ramon “Jun” Labo due to questions on his citizenship.
He served as
city mayor from 1992 to 2001; congressman from 2001 to 2010 and back as mayor from
2010 to present.
“We have seen
the best in local governance from what maybe termed as the Domogan lens, proven
by the numerous awards that the city has received thru him, notably the
cleanest and greenest city where the city won in three consecutive years thus
attaining its hall of fame status. The child-friendly city award, ten next wave
cities in ICT, presidential ‘Gawad Pamana’ award, top 20 in the cities
competitiveness evaluation, seal of good governance and many more,” Clemente
said.
It was during
his three consecutive terms as city mayor when Baguio opened doors to various
global platforms, counting the city as one of the pioneer signatories in
globally sanctioned sustained development declarations in the Asia-Pacific
region.
Clemente
cited the Asian Development Bank-initiated sustainable water integrated
management, which paved the way for the crafting of the first Water Code in
Southeast Asia where Baguio City and Domogan were declared as “water
champions”.
The United
Nations program on Cities for clean energy and clean air program helped the
city craft Baguio’s clean air ordinance, which led to the establishment of the
roadside inspection, testing and monitoring of vehicle emissions.
“Despite
public resistance, we have sustained its implementation as our local commitment
to contribute to improved health and achieve better air quality,” Clemente
said.
She added
that Clean Air Asia has pledged to support the city’s implementation of its
clean air initiatives and give its support to help the technical staff enhance
their skills to achieve better air quality.
“Because of
this single sustained activity of the city, we are one of four cities in Asia
given a recognition as a city for clean air and we are waiting for technical
assistance for the formulation of a new city clean air action plan," she
said.
The program
gave the city the ticket to be enrolled in the Breathlife network that also
engaged the Health Service Office to help monitor the health impacts of air
pollution.
Baguio was
one of the two Philippine cities, which were signatories of the Happy City
Declaration in Suwon, South Korea in 2017 that aimed to help cities realign
their current social development programs to enhance the happiness index of
constituents based on globally set parameters.
Domogan has
also touched lives in his 30 years of service.
Dr. Elmer
Fabito, medical officer III at the Baguio General Hospital and Medical Center
(BGHMC) in a video-taped testimony talked about his becoming a doctor, which
was made possible through the full scholarship from Domogan.
"The
scholarship program was indeed a great help to us beneficiaries because it
eases the burden of our parents, families who are doing all means just to send
us to school," he said.
Regional
Development Council co-chairman Milagros Rimando also shared how Domogan
inspired other local chief executives to attend the meetings of the highest
policy-making body of the region, which in the early years was impossible
considering the distance of the different provinces in the Cordillera region.
Dr. Virgilio
Bautista, a former member of the Constitutional Commission created by President
Rodrigo R. Duterte to review the 1987 Constitution and who also hails from
Baguio, also presented a token from the private citizens of the city and
thanked the mayor for his services.
Domogan lost
in the May midterm polls in his bid for a congressional seat representing
Baguio, ending his three decades of continuous service in the country’s summer
capital. -- PNA
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