'Nabubulok’ and ‘di-nabubulok’ politicians
>> Monday, June 15, 2015
LETTERS FROM THE AGNO
March L. Fianza
Last week the National Commission for Culture
and the Arts issued a Cease and Desist Order over the implementation of a
fencing and improvement project around city hall. The CDO is effective until
such time that an architectural plan that will not destroy the historical
characteristic of a historical site as marked by the National Historical
Commission of the Philippines is approved by the agencies.
When bad
proposals prevail over the good, especially when it comes to preserving the
natural environment of historical Baguio, one is bound to recall this city’s
older times. In my case, I was raised in a neighborhood around a hill where
Pineapples grew under Pine Trees. New Lucban road that goes around the hill was
lined with Pine Trees as well.
Pine needles
tickle the feet of young boys who have nothing to do on weekends but walk and
walk until they end up swimming in the river that winds around vegetable
gardens in the valley below. On our way home before dark, we find ourselves
catching Juju or Japanese fish in small natural ponds found between cabbage
plots.
Fast forward
to the 80s; Lucban Valley was no longer recognizable as the Pine needles
disappeared, the natural ponds where the Juju swam dried up, while residential
and storage houses occupied the gardens where the vegetables were
produced.
Two years
after PNoy sat as President, he took note of reports that Baguio and Boracay,
being leading tourist destinations, were growing rapidly and were being
destroyed by commercialization as there was an apparent lack of comprehensive
development and zoning plans, resulting in further degradation, deterioration
and decay.
With that
observation he created a task force composed of Tourism Sec. Ramon Jimenez,
Environment Sec. Ramon Paje, Interior and Local Government Sec. Mar Roxas, DPWH
Sec. Rogelio Singson and Justice Sec. Leila de Lima. An inter-agency meeting
immediately took place where environmental issues of Baguio and Boracay were
presented.
The presentation was expected to assist the task force draft an executive order
that will draw a general environment plan for the conservation of Baguio City
and Boracay as national assets.
Alas, the
concerns presented to the task force by the city were not the issues opposed by
its citizenry such as the commercialization and destruction of Burnham Park,
issuance of land awards to squatter-occupants, parking lots on mini-forests,
motor vehicle franchise issuance, and transient population. These issues were
not discussed because they were intentionally avoided by the presentors.
Six years
ago, then Senators Rodolfo Biazon and Miriam Defensor-Santiago opened
discussions on whether “Baguio is in a state of urban decay or not”. The
resounding answer from sectors that were consulted was in the positive as
proven by the data that were presented – unstoppable Townsite applications by
squatters occupying private and public lands, lack of water supply caused by
tourism and its requirements (hotels and restaurants), a continuing increase in
transient population brought about by colleges and universities as multiplying
factors, and traffic caused by the hooded issuance of thousands of new motor
vehicle franchises.
Before and
beyond 2010, the city’s environment problems that were the elements of urban
decay were never resolved. In fact, they became more serious. Proof of these
were the massive Irisan trash slide sometime on August 2011, the uncollected
basura in front of the public market and everywhere, illegal occupants became
legal owners of lots they squatted on with the passage of a law segregating
their lands from the public domain, the fast-pace development of residential
subdivisions, and last but not the least was the unresolved traffic disorder
controlled by a greedy traffic “experiment” that directed all motor vehicles to
pass the loops and road network around SM Mall.
But City
Hall and self-proclaimed environmentalist-politicians change their priorities
everytime elections come. On campaign flyers and ads they announce their
undying love for the environment, but later support the construction of cement
structures on little forests and even propose car parking projects on green
lawns. These priorities are understandable. Money does not grow on football
grounds as compared to construction and development that is where the money is.
And as many have repeatedly said: Money does not grow on trees and trees cannot
vote.
Their grasp
of “development” is equated with housing subdivisions, high-rise buildings and
flyovers. And the higher the buildings and longer the flyovers, all the more
that they understand “development”. They want Baguio to develop like a concrete
jungle, similar to the decaying cities in Metro Manila and New York. If not for
the oppositors to their proposals, our children will find Melvin Jones and its
adjacent lots paved with cement. The choice is up to us if we want to sacrifice
our green environment and open spaces in favor of concrete structures.
So there.
Too much concrete infrastructure and too much development is not too rewarding.
Sooner or later it will look ugly and can destroy a once beautiful city. As
election 2016 draws near, I am almost ready with a list of politicians that I
can rely on, especially in terms of protecting our environment and natural
resources.
On Election
Day, be able to weed out the “nabubulok” candidate or the selective
“environmentalist” who avoids issues that will affect his votes. Make sure that
the “di-nabubulok” or “Green” public servants win come 2016. On Election Day,
simply get rid of politicians who propose projects that destroy the environment
and those who kill trees for their own benefit. Period.
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