BONTOC, Mountain Province -- The Fourth
Division of the Court of Appeals has approved a compromise settlement between
Kalinga and Mountain Province over a controversial open dump site issue which
the former said polluted the Chico River making them file awrit of kalikasan
case against the latter.
The settlement which was signed by the
parties and submitted to the division on Feb. 12 gives officials of Bontoc
and Mountain Province six months to close and rehabilitate the Caluttit dump
site.
Kalinga officials said this had been
polluting the Chico River that straddles Mountain Province and Kalinga
and drains to the Cagayan River.
The dumping of garbage in the Caluttit dump
site which is located on a mountainside towards the Chico River has been
a source of controversy between the two Cordillera provinces for at
least a decade now, prompting the filing of the environmental case by the
non-government organization Kalinga Anti-pollution Action Group in October last
year.
Aside from the Bontoc and Mt. Province local
government units, the Environmental Management Bureau-Cordillera, Environmental
Management Bureau, the Department of Environment and Natural
Resources-Cordillera and the Department of Environment and Natural Resources
represented by their respective chiefs were included in the case for allegedly
being remiss in their duties to implement environmental laws in the particular
case.
In the compromise agreement, all the parties
acknowledged that the continued operation of the Caluttit open dump site
violates Republic Act No. 9003 otherwise known as the Ecological Solid Waste
Management Act of 2000 which prohibits the establishment and operation of open
dump site and controlled dump sites starting February 16,2001.
Both agreed that the Bontoc local government
unit with the assistance of the Mt. Province provincial government will
voluntarily undertake the closure and rehabilitation of the dump site within
six months starting February 22 when the decision was promulgated.
The undertaking includes the following
activities: repair of the retaining wall; fencing of the whole dump site to
prevent further dumping; soil cover rehabilitation; site re-vegetation; putting
up a signage that the dump site is closed; and removal of the accumulated
garbage in the dump site “if found technically sound and feasible” by the DENR
and the EMB.
Such agreement was the same compromise
proposed by the Office of the Solicitor General (OSG) which was rejected by
both the KAPAG and the Bontoc and Mt. Province during the amicable
settlement negotiations in Bontoc on February 1.
The talks failed as the respondents insisted
on a two-year extension on the usage of the dump site invoking the expected
difficulty of finding a Temporary Residual Containment Area (TRCA), citing the
dearth of available land in the town and likewise the time needed for the
development of the Sanitary Landfill (SLF) in the lot which the LGU has already
bought for the purpose.
On the other hand, KAPAG representatives
refused to budge on their demand for the immediate closure of the dump site
saying that further usage of the dump site is non-negotiable.
Some KAPAG members are unhappy over the
six-month extension given to Bontoc as well as the provision in the agreement
that the removal of the accumulated garbage in the dump site depends on
technical studies to be conducted by the DENR and EMB.
KAPAG, however, accepted the decision after
legal counsel and member Errol Comafay said the organization may conduct its
own studies to bolster its claim that the non-removal of the garbage deposits
in the dump site is an environmental hazard.
Dominic Sugguiyao, KAPAG member and a
supervising environmental management specialist in the Kalinga Environment and
Natural Resources, said that according to the findings of the Bantox, an
international anti-mercury crusader, the air above the dump site has high
mercury levels which, according to him, means that the earth and the
bodies of water in and near the dump site are also contaminated with
mercury.
Sugguiyao added that besides mercury,
the accumulated garbage in the dump site likely contains other toxic
heavy metals such as lead and cadmium.
Sugguiyao also said that even if the
respondents rebuild the fallen retaining wall holding back the garbage from
directly landing on the river, that would not guarantee the non-contamination
of the Chico River because the dump site has no impenetrable lining
allowing the juices of the garbage to seep through the earth into nearby bodies
of water.
Aside from conducting their own technical
studies to prove the necessity of removing the garbage deposits instead
of covering it as provided in the agreement, KAPAG also intends to closely
monitor the compliance of the respondents to the agreement as mandated by the
court decision.
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