HAPPY
WEEKEND
Gina
Dizon
SAGADA Mountain Province -- A quick look at
this town’s current waste management system shows no system working.
While the municipal LGU submits its waste management plans yearly
to the Department of Interior and Local Government in
accordance with Republic Act 9003, the
plan remains a plan while plastic waste is strewn all over the
streets, garbage is dumped on the rivers, and folks
downstream complain of solid waste reaching their water systems.
It was years ago when Sagada was
reaping awards consecutively from 1995 to year 2000 for being a clean and
green municipality till it reached a hall of fame award. But that was
before. It is not anymore. It would be good to look back to the waste
management system years ago and learn from there.
There was no need for a dump site then. What
was evidently in place then was the presence of a Materials Recovery Facility
(MRF) site in the center of the town. The presence of the MRF and the
cooperation of the community people were good practises that were
noted, president of the Sagada Solid Waste Association Inc (SSWAI)
Jed Angway said. Used plastics, unwanted bottles and cellophane were collected
and washed and collected at the MRF site located at a vacant lot near the
municipal hall.
It was an encouraging supportive act that the
LGU then led by former mayor Thomas Killip assigned utility persons to
organize the recyclable waste collected at the MRF site wash the dirt off from
the non –biodegradable waste. This, aside from other LGU support as the
provision of materials for the building of the MRF and coordinating with other
Manila-based individuals and groups working on waste management.
A local organization was organized with the
support of Manila-based environmentalist Binggirl Clemente. The SSWAI
composed of young men and women, professionals, elderly and
retired teachers were active going around barangays,
conducting information and education sessions and actually
showing how an MRF site is operational.
SSWAI implemented an organizational waste
management program in partnership with a supportive LGU where barangays were
encouraged to set up their own MRF sites. “SSWAI members went around
monitoring households to practise proper segregation of waste,” Jed
Angway said.
SSWAI secretary Rose Baniaga-Wangdali
said even other municipality LGU officers and officials came to Sagada
“to learn from us and we conducted IECs on waste management. ” Education
sessions contained topics on waste segregation and what RA 9003 or
an “Act providing for an ecological solid waste management program,
creating the necessary institutional mechanisms and incentives, declaring
certain acts prohibited and providing penalties, appropriating funds therefor”.
Other municipalities were inspired and also built their respective MRF
sites.
A strong executive will was obviously in
place which set the waste management system in motion coupled with the
initiatives of community folks and the support of other individuals and groups.
That was before when the waste
management efforts were collectively combined
with the result of community awards sweet to the
ears to listen to and nice to the sight to see garbage
properly disposed of.
Now is a different sight with garbage
strewn all over, plastic wastes reaching water systems resulting to
the flooding of rivers posing danger to homes nearby river
banks, brought about by plastic materials accumulated in
rivers clogging the waterways.
What happened? Since the MRF was brought down on the site
where the Centrum building was built in 2008, also led to the stopping of
SSWAIs waste management activities said the SSWAI secretary.
The years dragged on with no community MRF under the leadership of Mayor
Eduardo Latawan since 2007. The LGU purchased a lot in 2012
supposed to be a landfill somewhere in Ambasing overlooking the Lumyang
cave but was reportedly protested due to road right of way issues
obviously not ironed out before any purchase happened.
The LGU tried to build an MRF in 2011 with
the initiative of CSMV vestry member and vice mayor Richard Yodong to negotiate
with the church authorities of the St Mary the Virgin for an MRF site. The site
located below the gasoline station at sitio Makamkamlis was approved by the
vestry and remained a site only. A small building to house the MRF was built and
a water tank was installed by the LGU in 2011 and ended there. Since then, the
MRF did not see completion. The rest is history.
What do we see now? There is no
systematic MRF for households and visitors to bring non- biodegradable
bottles and plastics except to wait for a junk dealer from Isabela who
comes to town irregularly. Households and business establishments have
their own ways of disposing their plastic and styrofoam garbage. Some burn.
Some dump in other people’s waste box. Some throw down the river. Some store
these in their homes. Some have their own incinerators. Some bring these at a
junkshop far from the center town.
There is no method of recycling and
pulverizing non-biodegradable waste into other useful material such as hollow
blocks made from recycled styrofoam and plastic waste. Nor even a
composting site for biodegradable waste to be made into fertilizer.
While community households have their own responsibility to dispose off
their wastes properly, the support of the LGU is equally a strong
contributory factor to realize a community-based waste management
system.
With the LGU leadership now which takes the
garbage problem lightly and obviously no executive will to implement a
healthy waste management system except to see to it that the waste is dumped
and burned along Calvary Hill! Church authorities of St Mary the Virgin
irked over improper disposal of waste wrote Lawatan that the church
shall close the dumpsite as the manner of dumping biodegradable and
non-biodegradable waste mixed together is already posing threat to
sanitation and environmental health. The arrangement being temporary
urges the LGU to look for better ways to handle the community’s
waste.
Lessons learned and with the
initiatives of barangay officials now for barangay-based waste management
ways along with the collaboration of a junk shop owner to
collect non-biodegradable stuff, added with the long –delayed
completion of the MRF site and its activation, lets the
constituents of this tourist town look forward to better disposition of
waste and a satisfied community as it continues to accommodate tourists
contributing a major source of income for the people especially residing
in the Poblacion area.
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