Baguio ’s (and Benguet’s) distinctions
>> Friday, October 2, 2015
BENCHWARMER
by Ramon Dacawi
Urban sprawl
is distinctly rendering dubious Baguio ’s distinctions.
It’s
the City of Pines now losing its scent of and sense for pine. It’s a Flower
Garden City yearly celebrating its status with blooms grown and cut in
Benguet or cut out of paper. The only temperate city hereabouts in
the tropics now mothballs its winter clothes most of the year. The city of
occasional fog now experiences a hazy view more from smog than low-lying clouds
and mist.
Change is giving us new distinctions.
We now have a thriving business in
water delivery. We now have more homes with water tanks jutting out where
fireplace chimneys used to be. We may not have been the first to sell bottled
water, but our restaurants did pioneer the no-order, no-serve rule on drinking
water as a conservation measure. The Department of Environment and Natural Resources
has installed the most expensive and sensitive gadget at the foot of our
main street to correctly measure to the minutest
parts-per-million the quality of our urban air that we now and then
can only smell and see, yet can’t approximate without it.
At the height of Typhoon Feria years
back, Burnham Park was finally flooded up to Kisad Rd. , together with the
former one-story stone market that is now the multi-level Maharlika Livelihood
Center . News of the inundation caught on in Metro-Manila where people couldn’t
imagine how a mountainous terrain could be flooded.
Visitors do get confused. We tell them
Baguio logged the highest rainfall level ever in 24 hours, yet our taps are
dry. That irony becomes more pronounced as we continue sealing our open areas
with concrete. “Utaksemento” provides the umbrella effect of rainwater being
logged by concrete surface or rushing to the rivers and spilling into the seas
instead of sipping into the ground to recharge our water tables.
With global warming, we may soon lose
the heaviest rainfall record. But even with global warming, we’re still 10
degrees Celsius cooler than Manila anytime of the year. It will
always be hotter down there where hand-me-down jackets are cheaper
than up here where the first “wagwag” or “ukay-ukay” shop opened.
Strawberries are still aplenty that we
still leave them to visitors. Never mind Benguet’s lament over the fact that
“Baguio strawberries”, “Baguio beans” and “Baguio brooms” actually come from
the province’s towns of La Trinidad, Buguias and Sablan. It’s a
misnomer, but as city mayor Mauricio Domogan once reacted to another
politician’s complaint that they should be tagged correctly according to where
they come from, sales may dip if they’re correctly tagged “Benguet beans,
brooms and strawberries”, not Baguio.
At least, the flower growers in Bahong,
La Trinidad, rightfully the country’s Rose Garden Capital, won’t mind the
presumption of visitors coming for the “Baguio Flower
Festival” about Baguio producing what it shows and sells them. It’s
a quid pro quo with the farmers as long as we do more flower festivals.
Personally, I proposed the holding of a
taxi festival to celebrate our having the most number of units in relation to
population. The proposal fizzled out when I found myself repeatedly beaten to
one one rainy night. .
It’s different now with the polluted
Balili River endlessly flowing from Baguio to La Trinidad and Sablan. That joke
about symbiosis – about Baguio ’s organic sewer flowing into the river to fatten
La Trinidad-produced lettuce that ends up in Baguio ’s salad bowls – is no
longer funny, at least for town mayor Edna Tabanda and Benguet Gov.
Nestor Fongwan.
That should explain
in part what snags the Metro-Baguio Plan, euphemistically renamed BLIST
(Baguio-La Trinidad-Itogon-Sablan-Tuba), concept of urban development from
getting off the ground. The four Benguet towns harbor that uncomfortable
feeling that BLIST would just enhance Benguet’s role as Baguio ’s resource base
and repository of its trash.
Still, the BLIST is the option, for the
urban sprawl – planned or unplanned – will continue to spill into Benguet. We
need the plan to achieve what planners call a
“holistic and comprehensive” approach to development of contiguous areas
sharing a fast urbanizing landscape.
We have to adopt the plan, before
Metro-Baguio-Benguet experiences what Baguio has turned into – a
city that just “growed and growed” (to borrow Topsy’s ’s words in
Uncle Tom’s Cabin) –even with a master plan laid out over a century ago by
Architect Daniel Burnham to guide the development of the country’s Summer
Capital.
Whatever. Baguio is still Baguio even
with its imperfections. . (e-mail: mondaxbench@yahoo.com/ecowalkmondax@gmail.com for
comments).
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