Public-private
sectors urged to protect water source
By
Abegail Clemente
BAGUIO CITY -- Despite a Supreme Court order, illegal
structures and settlers within the Busol forest reservation here have yet to be
removed.
This was known during
a media forum Thursday wherein the Baguio Regreening Movement urged stronger
public and private partnership to preserve the watershed which supplies most of
the city’s water needs.
BRM chairperson
ErdolfoBalajadia bared fencing of the watershed is ongoing to stop more illegal
squatters from getting in.
“I urge the people to
cooperate with us; we are trying to protect the environment. Because in the
first place parasaatin ‘to - ikaw, ako, at sainyo,”
Balajadia also called
on the City Council to push for the enactment of the Environment Code for the
city.
Department of
Environment and Natural Resources assistant regional director Augusto Lagon,
said P11 million was available for ongoing
fencing of the watershed.
This is part of the P16 M DENR Sec. Ramon Paje
committed for protection of the watershed when he visited Baguio last year.
The remaining P5M will
be allotted for re-greening projects for Busol, he said.
Baguio Water District
general manager Salvador Royeca reported more than 20 organizations donated for
the fencing project, to complete the
P32M needed funds to fence the Baguio side.
Royeca said 12 fence
spans were constructed from the P3M donated by BWD and P1M from the Benguet
Electric Coop.
Other BRM partners
that joined the forum were the Baguio City Police Office headed by City
Director PSSupt. George Daskeo, City Legal Officer Atty.MelchorRabanes, NBI
chief investigation Darcy Binay-an, City Building and Architecture Office
Representative Engr. Orlando Genove, and Private Sector Volunteer Rogelio
Gose.
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