Council probes waste contracts, tipping fees
>> Tuesday, October 14, 2014
By
Aileen P. Refuerzo
BAGUIO CITY – The city council is now
investigating the city government’s contracts covering hauling out of wastes.
The body last week directed
submission of all contracts and documents related to the garbage disposal
services and tasked the committee on laws to determine the legality of said
deals within 30 days.
The general services
officer was also tasked to submit a report on the comparative weights of the
wastes being hauled out from the staging area in Benguet to the receiving point
in Urdaneta City.
This is to determine
if there are discrepancies in the tonnage during delivery and if these are
being recorded properly.
The body also sought
the creation of a position devoted to monitoring the garbage disposal
activities to ensure transparency.
The council committee
on health was also asked to submit a summary of all the discussions on garbage
concerns for submission next month to guide the body on the past concerns and
agreements reached and on whether or not these were fulfilled.
As this developed, the
body also threatened to declare hauler Mark Anthony Camilo, manager of M. A.
Camilo Freight Services persona non grata for failing to attend the city
council session on several invitations.
A check on the council
records was sought to validate Camilo’s snub before the body decides whether or
not this would merit such declaration.
The city council
tasked the City Solid Waste Management Board (CSWMB) to look into the alarming
increase in the volume of city wastes being hauled out to the landfill facility
in Urdaneta City and tipping fees.
The body approved the
resolution proposed by Councilor Peter Fianza who said the board should check
and investigate the drastic hike in the volume of wastes from a daily average
of 127 tons in 2013 to 155 tons during the first half of the current year
representing an increase of 22 percent.
City general services
officer Romeo Concio said he will check on accuracy of the reported amount of
increase albeit he affirmed that the city normally experiences a significant
rise in the volume of wastes usually at 15 percent during peak tourist months,
opening of classes and the rainy season.
He said this is caused
by the slackening of collection operations for recyclable wastes due to the
rainy season and the added weight of the wet refuse.
Fianza said the
increase was deduced from the record of payment of hauling services to Urdaneta
waste facility for the period January 1 to June 30 this year amounting to
P24,318,986.35.
“Unless remedial
measures are immediately instituted, the city may have to supplement the budget
allocation for the current year for hauling services of garbage that will
include tipping fees with an additional amount of P20,000,000,” Fianza noted.
He said it should be
“encouraging to interpret that the payment of hauling services for the month of
December 2013 with a low of 100 tons per day will suggest possible and
attainable increase of waste diversion targets as mandated under section 20 of
Republic Act 9003.”
He said the solid
waste board should be on hand to look into this being tasked to monitor and
oversee the implementation of the city’s solid waste management plan and to
adopt measures to promote and ensure the viability and implementation of waste
programs in the component barangays.
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