LT mayor faces Ombudsman case for stand vs mall project
>> Monday, November 5, 2012
LA TRINIDAD, Benguet – La Trinidad Mayor Gregorio Abalos is facing his second Ombudsman case over a P250-million mall project in this Benguet capital town which he said was “political.”
Even suspecting that the grave
misconduct and oppression lodged by private developer Jarco Realty and
Development Corporation which in 2009 forged a lease contract with La Trinidad
government for a mall project, as “political,” Abalos said he is braving all
these in the interest of the 120,000 residents of his town.
Earlier in January, two residents
whom Abalos fired at the local government filed dishonesty, grave misconduct
and violations of anti-graft and corrupt practices against Abalos before the
Ombudsman over the controversial Black Hole project, also known the Zero Waste
Management System technology.
In the second complaint against
Abalos, Jarco claimed it has been suffering huge losses and opportunities since
Dec. 21, 2009 because of the mayor’s continued refusal for the lease for at least
30 years of a 3,910 square meter property on which Jarco will construct the
mall.
On August 17 this year, Jarco
corporate secretary Juanito Teope, on behalf of its board of directors,
complained before the Office of the Ombudsman for Luzon.
Abalos, suspecting something
political ahead of the 2013 polls, said “they want my neck.”
The town mayor, however, said he
is firm on disapproving the mall project insisting there were no genuine
consultations with affected residents on the project.
The interest of stakeholders in
La Trinidad was not taken into consideration, he said, even hinting “money
changed hands” during the town administration before him.
Before the 2010 polls, as a
private citizen, Abalos, a lawyer and a former regional director of the Department
of Labor in Cagayan Region, succeeded in seeking a temporary restraining order
form the court halting the digging of footings for the project.
“When I took over, I constituted
a committee involving even town councilors to study the contract and they found
that it was not feasible,” the town mayor said.
Aside from lack of public
consultations, the town executive said the mall proposal did not pass through
the National Economic Development Authority (NEDA) Investment Coordination
Committee that stipulates that projects beyond P200 million must pass through
it.
NEDA even cited the Jarco
contract as non-feasible, he said.
“The process (for its approval)
was rigged,” Abalos said.
Abalos said he re-endorsed the
issue to the town council requiring an honest to goodness consultations and
that it should pass the NEDA ICC. “Until now, the council has not
endorsed the matter back to me.
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