Villa Verde Trail to link Pangasinan and Vizcaya
>> Friday, September 18, 2015
SAN
NICOLAS, Pangasinan — What used to be a shorter, cooler and history-laden
national highway connecting this province of Region 1 (Ilocos) with Nueva
Vizcaya in Region 2 (Cagayan Valley), called the Villa Verde Trail, is now
being revived by the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH).
This
road was delisted by the DPWH-Bureau of Maintenance in the 1980s because of the
difficulty in maintaining it and remains closed.
But
upon the intervention of 6th District Board Member Ranjit Ramos-Shahani, son of
former Sen. Leticia Ramos-Shahani, the road constructed during the
administration of President Ferdinand Marcos is now being revived.
Engr.
Narchito Arpilleda, administrative officer of the 3rd District Engineering
Office (DEO), explained that the road was delisted because it was not readily
maintainable and had a low carrying average daily traffic (ADT).
It
stretches to 27 kilometers earth road with assumed road right of way of 60
meters for mountainous terrain and a five-meter width.
Engr.
Emmanuel Diaz, District Engineer of 3rd DEO, added that its bad condition was
aggravated by the 1990 killer earthquake that caused massive road slips and
landslides rendering most parts of it impassable.
Since
then, many people here had no access road and people were physically divided,
some in Maliko, San Nicolas, Pangasinan and others, Sta. Fe, Nueva Vizcaya.
Danilo
Bugtong, an indigenous peoples leader, here cited how the road closure has
affected their tribe. “Nahati na sa dalawa ang mga pamilya rito na dati
nasa 800 – ang iba nasa bahagi ng San Nicolas, Pangasinan at ang iba naman ay
sa Sta. Fe, Nueva Vizcaya kaya dalawa na rin ang barangay hall (The 800
families of our tribe have been split in two – those in San Nicolas in
Pangasinan and those in Sta. Fe, Nueva Vizcaya and they are under separate
barangay managements)”
He
said he has to pass San Jose, Sta. Fe, Nueva Vizcaya to Umingan before reaching
his town hall.
“For
a private vehicle it takes at least two-and-a-half hours, but if this road
reopens it would take less than an hour along the Villa Verde Trail between San
Nicolas and Sta. Fe,” he said
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