By Dexter A. See
BAGUIO CITY – Mayor Mauricio G. Domogan said the
excessive development cost aggravated by the overlapping claims of land owners
are among the major reasons why the city government shelved the proposal to put
up an engineered sanitary landfill between Camp 7 and Sto. Tomas school area.
“While barangays officials and
residents were supportive of the earlier proposal to put up a sanitary landfill
in Sto. Tomas, several experts, including Korean technical people, did not
recommend the city-owned property in the area as the site of our engineered
sanitary landfill because of the excessive development cost,” Domogan said.
He added among works that will be
undertaken is the construction of access roads leading to the landfill site
which will again pass through some private properties that would subsequently
derail the project.
He agreed that the search for a
lasting solution to the city’s garbage problem is still one of the priorities
of his administration amidst the setback that the city government had
encountered over the past several years but there is a need for a collective
effort among the local governments in the Baguio-La
Trinidad-Itogon-Sablan-Tuba-Tublay (BLISTT) area in order to effectively and
efficiently work out the needed solutions to a problem that the neighboring
towns will also face in the future once development spreads to their places.
According to the city mayor, the
recommendations not to push through with the Sto. Tomas engineered sanitary
landfill project came from local and international experts and it was not the
sole decision of any city official considering that the evaluation and
assessment of the project passes through a pool of technical experts who are
knowledgeable in such filed.
While it is true that the hauling of
garbage is not the permanent solution to the city’s solid waste disposal
problem, Domogan pointed out the current hauling of garbage outside the city is
to make sure that the gains of our local tourism industry will not be derailed
as the city government continues to study existing proposals on how to address
the garbage problem, particularly the establishment of a sanitary landfill in a
suitable area and some proposals relative to waste-to-energy which are now
pending before the city solid waste management board.
He appealed to local residents to
continue strictly complying with the segregation of garbage at source in order
to significantly reduce the volume of waste being hauled out of the city and
that the segregation process is now gaining headway in the city’s 128 barangays
although it will still take some time for the people to really value the
importance of their cooperation in the solid waste disposal concerns.
Some barangays are reportedly also
doing their part in the disposal of non-biodegradable waste because of the
presence of sufficient land where such type of waste will be disposed while
others are also doing their part in taking away the recyclables which serve as
the source of income of volunteers in the segregation of garbage in the
barangays waste disposal sites.
Domogan called on local residents to
cooperate with the current policies on solid waste disposal considering that
long-term solutions are now being put in place by local and foreign experts in
order to help effectively and efficiently address the problems of rapid
urbanization vis-à-vis the city’s limited land area, thus, the need to partner with
other local governments for such purpose.
No comments:
Post a Comment