Four city rivers reclassified according to water quality
>> Wednesday, July 18, 2012
By Ramon Dacawi
BAGUIO
CITY -- Using the water quality classification of rivers, readers may want to
place the Balili that flows from Baguio to Benguet into any of the
following categories: AA – the water
is potable (safe to drink) with a little treatment; A – the water is potable
after minor treatment; B - good for bathing and swimming, fishes; C –
good for fish and agricultural purposes; D- for industrial purpose, excessively
polluted.
On
request of the city council last Monday, the Environmental Management Bureau
will reclassify the Balili River, together with the other water bodies with
headwaters in the city – Ambalanga towards Itogon, Benguet, Bued along Kennon
Rd., and Galiano towards Asin, Tuba, Benguet.
Cortes
Dagupen,chief of the water quality management section of the Environmental
Management Bureau –Cordillera, told the city council that the request
will be forwarded to the EMB main office which will direct his office to
conduct a study towards the reclassification of the water bodies. The process,
he said, may take a year and a half.
In
1975, the Balili was classified “A”. Since then, no reclassification was made
on the vital water body that feeds into La Trinidad, Benguet’s capital town and
the country’s “salad bowl”, and into Sablan, Benguet. It is named
Naguilian River as it flows into La Union before it empties into
the China Sea. Galiano was class “B” in 1989,Bued was C to D in 1995.
It’s
been quite sometime since those years, and “the present state of the Balili
River can be perceived as way far (below) said classification”, noted city
councilor Joel Alangsab, who filed the resolution asking the EMB to reclassify
the four rivers.
Alangsab
noted that the recently created Balili River Revitalization Coalition also saw
the need to update the river’s classification made 37 years ago.
Some
city councilors questioned the need for a council resolution seeking
river reclassification. Councilor Nicasio Palaganas asked if “reclassification
is a necessity for its (Balili) rehabilitation?”. Councilor Peter Fianza
wondered whether a downgrade to “D” would give the wrong impression for people
to further pollute the river.
“Isn’t
it bad practice to request an agency to do its job?” queried councilor Erdolfo Balajadia.
Councilor Perlita Rondez opined a reclassification may result in a “humble acceptance”
of river degradation and serve as a rallying point for bringing these water
bodies back to life.
“We
don’t lower but try to make it Class A,” pointed out councilor Betty Lourdes
Tabanda who also proposed a public hearing be held on the issue.
Whatever,
Dagupen said a request for reclassification is needed before it is done, as per
Department Administrative Order 34 of the Department of Environment and Natural
Resources.
Alangsab
said the new classification will guide the city in addressing the river
pollution problem and “open the eyes of the constituents and households of this
truth considering that based (on) studies, households contribute a considerable
portion in the pollution of such rivers”.
Pollution
of the water bodies has worsened over the years, with households and commercial
establishments piping their sewage and toxic effluents into the rivers and
dumping soil and garbage into the tributaries during the rainy season.
At
a meeting last February of the “Alay sa Kalinisan”, a multi-agency body at the
forefront of Baguio’s cleanliness drive, mayor Mauricio Domogan said pipes
dumping waste into rivers should be sealed so that erring households
would find their sewage flowing back and belching up their sinks and toilet
bowls.
This
after the mayor and members of “Alay” were briefed by members of the Balili
River System Revitalization Coalition (BRSRC) and EMB officials on the
tell-tale signs of pollution: low dissolved oxygen (the amount of oxygen needed
by aquatic life to survive), high biochemical oxygen demand (the amount of
oxygen consumed during decomposition of organic waste), and high content of
coliform, a bacterium that thrives on feces.
The
mayor then asked the inclusion of the Bued and Galiano in the rehabilitation
program of the coalition established last year and composed of the city and La
Trinidad local government unit, the academe, private organizations, the DENR
and the media.
For
years now, prominent medical practitioner and environmentalist, Dr. Julie
Camdas-Cabato, has been into rallying barangays along the Balili to maintain
cleanliness of their portions of the waterway.
On
July 25, volunteers being coordinated by city councilor Peter Fianza and the
City Disaster Risk Reduction Management Council will unclog the upper portions
of the Balili of snagged materials hampering the smooth flow of water as a
flood-prevention measure.
Meanwhile,
the city council is keen on creating a “Balili River Task Force” led by the EMB
to inventory sources of pollution on the river and to implement
provisions of the Sanitation Code of the Philippines, the Clean Water Act and
the city’s water code.
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