Mt Province Gov Mayaen dies aboard helicopter
>> Wednesday, April 6, 2016
By Angel
B. Baybay
BONTOC, Mountain
Province Gov. Leonard Mayaen reportedly
died aboard a helicopter Thursday after
cardiac arrest ending a long career in public service with Vice Gov. Bonifacio Lacwasan and Board Member
Francis Tauli agreeing Thursday to take their oath as governor and vice
governor, respectively, on Tuesday, April 5.
Mayaen was
pronounced dead around 3p.m. by attending physicians at the Notre Dame Hospital
in Baguio City where he was airlifted after receiving initial medical attention
at the Bontoc General Hospital here. He was 63.
Reports
from the Provincial Security Office here revealed the governor was found lying
down on the floor inside his bedroom at the Mansion House 11 a.m. Thursday by
provincial security guard William Tagkitag who alerted the Provincial Disaster
Risk Reduction Management Office.
Responding
rescuers rushed him to Bontoc Hospital but was transferred to Baguio City three
hours later when a chopper from the Philippine Air Force arrived.
Security
guards assigned at the Mansion House, official residence of the province’s
chief executive, narrated that Tagkitag was to remind the governor that an
official function at the PDRRMO was about to start when he discovered him
sprawled on the floor.
Mayaen was
born in Besao on March 14, 1953. His family moved to Mount Data in Bauko town
where his parents worked at the vegetable farms.
In 1967,
Mayaen finished his elementary education as the class valedictorian at the
Mount Data Elementary School.
Four years
later, he graduated at the University of Baguio High School with honors.
He then
moved to the Baguio Colleges Foundation, now the University of the Cordilleras
(UC), and earned his diploma as Bachelor of Arts cum laude in 1975. On the same
year, he enrolled at the UC College of Law and finished it in 1979.
He took
and passed the bar examinations on the same year.
He
likewise finished his Masters in Public Administration in 1998 at the
University of Baguio as a Magna Cum Laude.
Coming
from a poor family,
Mayaen had to earn his way to school. Dr. Allison Bellagan who once taught him
at the Mount Data Elementary School
remembers him as a timid and soft spoken boy but could outdo his classmates
academically. “He usually comes to class with his younger brother in tow but I
really did not mind since he was doing good. He would cuddle his younger
brother or carry him with a back strap when he sleeps,” Belagan said.
He would do odd jobs just to earn something during his high school and college days.
It was only when he began teaching while enrolled at the law school that he tasted the
simplest luxuries of life.
Mayaen resigned his teaching job at the Tublay School of Home Economics
in 1980 to start his private law practice.
Eight years later, he tried his luck in politics and ran for board
member of this province. He won a seat.
In 1992, he was elected vice governor and won a fresh mandate in 1995.
He was voted governor in 1998 but lost his re-election bid in 2001.
Nine years later, he came back with vengeance and reclaimed the
governorship.
His re-election attempt in 2013 recorded the most lopsided battle for
the governorship in recent years.
Being unopposed in the coming elections, he was to serve his third and
last term as governor by July if not for his untimely death.
His six years as vice governor earned dividends for the province.
It was under his leadership that many positions in the
SangguniangPanlalawigan were created and filled up.
Together with now Bontoc Mayor Frank Odsey, he
initiated the institutionalization of the Provincial Scholarship Program and
caused the settlement of various inter-municipal boundary disputes.
Folks said
as governor, he will always be remembered as the “pro-employee governor.”
He did not
only initiate the creation of hundreds of positions but, in coordination with
the vice governor and members of the SP, was also primarily responsible in
giving all benefits to employees.
He was
also known for his peace advocacies in settling disputes between and among
tribes in the province.
Many are
still not aware but he put an end to a long-drawn tribal conflict by spending
his own money to pay a financial obligation
demanded by the aggrieved tribe.
It was also during his term that the Provincial Peace and Order Council
was awarded as the best PPOC in the whole country for three successive years.
He made access to the farthest barangays his priority when he regained
the governorship in 2010.
Provincial and farm to market roads were opened or improved during his
term.
In his talk during the opening of the Lang-ay Festival Agricultural and
Trade fair last Friday, Provincial Administrator JohnyLausan referred to
Mayaen as “the man with vision”. “
He has put Mountain Province in the global map in terms of tourism,
economic growth, peace and order, unity and
excellence,” Lausan said.
Mayaen’s untimely death dampened the spirit of the coming Lang-ay
Festival, Foundation Day and the Igorot
International Convention.
The parade to mark the start of the agro-trade fair last Friday was
done away with together with all other scheduled festive activities.
In a last minute decision, the Lang-ay Organization decided to
tentatively reschedule the Lang-ay Festival originally calendared on April 6,7,
and 9 to April 14-16.
It was likewise announced that the Igorot International Convention and
the Foundation Day celebrations will push through less the merry makings.
No final decision on the wake and burial of the late governor was
available as of press time.
He was married to Sonia GaweMayaen who is now being touted to suceed
him in his bid as reelectionist provincial governor. Mayaen’s body now lies in
state at their residence in
BarangayPinsao, Baguio City.
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