Court allows uprooting of 28 trees: Congress to probe Baguio SM project
>> Monday, April 30, 2012
BAGUIO CITY – Congress will start an investigation
next month on the SM Development Corp. expansion project here which is being
protested by residents and environmentalists since it includes the uprooting or
“earthballing” of around 200 trees at
Luneta Hill.
Ifugaoi
Rep. Teddy Baguilat bared this saying he might chair the inquiry even as he
called on Environment and Natural Resources Secretary Ramon Paje and Baguio
City Mayor Maurice Domogan to listen to the people’s protests against the
cutting or uprooting of trees at thew project site.
This,
as presiding
Judge Antonio M. Esteves of the city’s Regional Trial Court Branch 5 ordered
the immediate earth-balling of 28 trees within SM here where 42 alnus trees and
one pine tree were “earth-balled” prior to the extension of the temporary
environment protection order (TEPO).
Baguilat,
who chairs the National Cultural Communities committee and is vice chair of the
House committee on Natural Resources, said that the removal of the pine trees
should not be allowed as they help make Baguio City unique among the cities in
the Philippines.
“It
is ironic that Baguio is named the City of Pines and yet developers from
outside the city and the Cordillera are now there to remove them and are being
allowed to do so,” said Baguilat, “It is almost criminal.”
Baguilat
had expressed fear that allowing one developer to uproot so many trees will
open the floodgates for other developers to do the same or at an even grander
scale.
“If
we allow SM to do this to 168 trees, sooner or later, other developers would
follow.People should realize that aside from the cool weather and the
Cordillera culture, the pine trees also define Baguio. To lose them would mean
losing Baguio’s identity,” he said.
Baguilat
said he was also throwing his support behind Kabataan party list representative
Raymond Palatino, who has called for the investigation of the expansion of the
SM mall in Baguio City and also expressed his firm opposition to the cutting or
uprooting of the trees in Luneta Hill.
Palatino
recently filed House Resolution 2069, directing the House Committee on Natural
Resources and Committee on Ecology to conduct a joint inquiry, in aid of
legislation, on the legality and propriety of the permit granted by the
Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) allowing the cutting and
earth-balling of trees.
The
resolution also directs the DENR to immediately suspend the clearance and
permit granted to SM Development Corp. which operates the SM mall in Baguio
City.
Baguiilat
said SMDC intends to cut 43 fully grown Alnusjaponica trees and
uproot 97 growing pine trees with the approval of the permit last Oct 27.
signed by Environment Secretary Ramon Paje on Oct. 17.
Meanwhile,
judge
Esteves’s April 16 order for the immediate earth-balling of 28 trees, came
after a multi-sectoral inspection within the SM area where there were 43 trees
that were initially earth-balled to validate conflicting reports whether or not
SM complied with the required earth-balling of the trees.
“The
Department of Environment and Natural Resources is hereby directed to
immediately supervise the re-planting of the trees that have undergone initial
earth-balling procedures at the Luneta Hill,” Esteves stated in his order,
adding that both SMIC and DENR are mandated to tender a written report to the
court as to the actions taken in order to allow the trees to survive within 24
hours upon the receipt of the order.
Engineer
Bien Mateo, SMIC vice president for mall operations, said the conduct of the
multi-sectoral ocular inspection was successful since the mall management was
able to prove their critics that what they have undergone was earth-balling and
not tree cutting as earlier being alleged by the Save 182 Movement.
“We
were able to prove to them our sincerity and transparency in the conduct of our
mall expansion project. We hope that we were able to open our doors for further
talks on how to address their concerns through the help of concerned government
agencies,” Mateo told the Manila Standard, adding that their P1 billion mall
expansion project will help address the soil erosion problem that the mall had
experienced since 2005.
Mateo
said SMIC will continue to comply with the conditions prescribed in their
permits on how to go about their mall expansion activities and the succeeding
court orders relative to the pending case filed against its expansion project
to show their commitment and compliance to lawful orders.
When
asked on what is the survival rate of the over 6,000 assorted tree seedlings
that they were able to plant over the past several years in different places
around the city, Mateo disclosed that they have a 60 percent survival rate but
they are obliged to replace the ones which already died while committing to
plant 50,000 more trees in the next two years in Baguio and Benguet with the
initial 20,000 trees to be planted in strategic watersheds this year.
He
said SMIC will await the decision of Interior and Local Government Secretary
Jesse Robredo on when to conduct the succeeding dialogues in order to thresh
out the solutions to the issues being raised against their mall development
project.
1 comments:
Trees are the most important part of landscaping, just think of everything they do. And these people are always running around doing it not because people ask them to because its a problem, because they want to for businesses and unforseen reasons.
-Oscar Valencia
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