Waste destroying Sagada as green tourist haven

>> Monday, January 7, 2013

By Gina Dizon


SAGADA, Mountain Province -- Once an award winner for being a clean and green municipality, this tourist town is not anymore,  with proliferation of waste in the town’s  main streets and trash dumped on mountain slopes and rivers.

The Vestry of the Church of St Mary the Virgin said they were not happy with the way the Local Government Unit was dumping waste down Calvary Hill prompting  church authorities to  inform Mayor Eduardo Latawan  Jr. that the church  shall close the dumpsite after the Vestry noted waste dumped was not properly maintained along the steep slopes overlooking  Echo Valley, a popular tourist attraction of the town. 

CSMV Senior Warden Patrick Pooten said a letter of the Vestry sent to Latawan informed the town executive of the detrimental manner of how  the waste was dumped posing hazard to public health and environmental sanitation.  

Pooten said the LGU should segregate the degradables from the non-biodegradable waste.   

“The dumping site is a temporary one while the LGU  establishes  a site for a materials recovery facility (MRF) site yet up to now, there is no MRF  yet that the LGU has built,”  Pooten added.

CSMV  rector Rev. Prinzel  Balitog said the church could only allow the use of the area as a dumping site on the first quarter and before  heavy rains come next year.   

The waste dumped along Calvary Hill poses environmental threat to the villagers downstream southern barangays of Sagada when heavy rains fall since waste flows down  the river.

Stench of burned non-biodegradable waste bothered folks  living  nearby. Vestry members said.  The river waters below Calvary Hill  flows  towards Uud Creek  downstream joining the Bakkong River where waters irrigate the ricefields of southern Sagada namely Taccong, Suyo, Nacagang, Ankileng and Payageo. Waters here eventually pass through Malitep River and join the Chico River.    

Waste is collected during Saturday market days and from other households and hauled by a dump truck specially purchased from the one million peso  prize of  the LGU having garnered a Seal of Good Housekeeping from the Department of Interior and Local Government.

It has been noted that the town’s  LGU has identified an MRF  site at an area located down the  gasoline station at  sitio Makamkamlis yet  up to now, no MRF  has yet been  built. 

Vice Mayor Richard Yodong during the Sagada tourism planning activity conducted by the provincial   tourism and planning and development offices , said the LGU still has to purchase the  needed  MRF equipment. 

Waste mismanagement came up as a major issue during the said tourism planning conducted Dec. 18 and 19 with the observation that indiscriminate waste handling poses major harm to the town’s tourism industry.  

Blame it on urbanization, but waste management, tourism-related trainings and an efficient traffic system were the identified concerns of  entrepreneurs and  tourist guides here in this tourist town following  a two- day planning on tourism  held  during the holiday season. 

The seminar was facilitated by Department of Trade and Industry, and tourism, planning and  development offices of the province.

 With environmental tourism a major come-on in Sagada, the equal need for waste management was top concern.  

Sagada Genuine Guides Association (SAGGAS) president John Magwelang said garbage mismanagement will further harm the tourism industry of the municipality if not checked.

He added there was need to implement existing ordinances on waste management.    

Tourism is a major source of income especially among the residents of Poblacion.

Heavy traffic jams along narrow streets of Sagada especially during yuletide season, town fiesta first week of February, and the Lenten holiday was also cited as a major issue.

Participants noted the need to implement the LGU's traffic management ordinance.

Also, trainings on tour guiding and tourism management and an information packet were identified needs projected  for implementation in partnership with  the Department of  Tourism, National Commission on  Culture and the Arts (NCCA)  and other concerned agencies.

Plans shall be presented to the municipal tourism council and further included in a provincial strategic planning for 2013, Provincial Tourism officer Francis Degay said.  

2 comments:

preservesagada.wordpress.com January 7, 2013 at 5:29 AM  

Poor sanitation standards as well as the absence of building and zoning policies, plus the surge of the growing mass market which have led to an unabated tourism infrastructure, created and it is still does, unfavourable impacts which are now slowly felt by the locals. Despite of tourism’s positive impacts such as the creation of jobs and the increase in household income, like a cake laced with arsenic, it is slowly poisoning Sagada. Take the case of that bumper to bumper traffic along Daoangan during the peak season. Pedestrians could not even get a decent space where they can walk safely. Vehicles in the absence of a traffic jam, rush haphazardly putting the people on the side of the road in danger. Are we in need of road humps or a speed limit in the near future? Daym. Carving out a new road through Tangeb isn’t the solution. What other forms of destruction can we think of in favour of tourism?

I believe that there is a lack of tourism plan, a plan which is supposedly beyond ways to attract more tourists to come and increase financial gains from it. Tourism although being dubbed as the major source of income should basically not twist the dynamics of a society. A community-based tourism such as this is ought to be sustainable. In a place where there are no stringent regulations regarding waste disposal, and seeing candy wrappers among many others everywhere, gives these tourists the idea of how they can also do their fair share of trashing the place. With the lack of policies that could outweigh these adverse effects of tourism and urbanization, these two will just continue to exacerbate the situation.

Unknown January 8, 2013 at 7:32 PM  

Hey there everyone, this is sad. I have a thought tho what if we encourage the visitors that the rubish they brought to town they should as well bring it down where the hell they got the garbage. For example in mountaineering they have this LEAVE NO TRACE principle. great day everyone...

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