SP pushes tree-cutting moratorium in Baguio
>> Friday, July 24, 2020
By Dexter A. See
The city council, during
last Monday’s regular session, approved on first reading a proposed ordinance
declaring a tree cutting moratorium in the city and imposing sanctions to
violations.
The council stated that
the primary objective of the proposed moratorium is to arrest the degradation
and wanton destruction of the city’s forest resources.
City legislators claimed
it will be a declared policy of the city government to allow the city’s
environment to recover and to heal itself by temporarily prohibiting the
cutting of trees within the city.
However, dead trees and
trees that poses danger to life, safety and property shall be exempted from the
coverage of the tree cutting moratorium.
The council disclosed
the moratorium shall be in effect for at least 5 continuous years from the date
of the effectivity of the ordinance with an option of extension upon the
legislative action of the body.
The Council tasked the
City Environment and Parks Management Office (CEPMO) to strictly monitor the
implementation of the proposed moratorium and act on behalf of the city
government in the apprehension and the imposition of sanctions of individuals
or groups, may it be private or public, for violations of the same.
Violators of the
provisions of the ordinance shall be fined P5,000 and confiscation of the
lumber, any tree cutting tools and equipment and imprisonment for a period not
exceeding one year or both upon the discretion of the court for first and
succeeding offenses without prejudice to any possible criminal or civil
liability.
The council disclosed
that the latest tree inventory conducted by the Cordillera office of the
Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR-CAR) and CEPMO showed
there are more than 2.5 million trees in the city thriving in the forest and
reservations, watersheds, parks, road-rights-of-way, government lots, including
private properties.
Recent studies claimed a
community needs at least 40 percent of its total land area covered by forest or
urban tree canopy to maintain a healthy and stable ecosystem but the city has
already reached the point below the aforesaid threshold with its urban tree
cover at only 28.28 percent which is equivalent to only 1,643 hectares out of
its total land area of 5,749 hectares.
The council added the
city’s urban crying capacity indicates that its current tree population is
sufficient for over 350,000 residents, and a daytime population that climbs to
over 700,000 with the influx of out of town workers, students, businessmen and
tourists.
The council stipulated
drastic measures are needed to effectively and efficiently arrest alleged over
development and preserve the city’s remaining urban forest to sustain a healthy
environment for the future.
Ironically, a huge
number of pine trees in the city are on the brink of extinction because of the
ongoing advances in urban development and to the rapid growth of population due
to migration in the city.-- Dexter A. See
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