By Peter
A. Balocnit
CITY OF TABUK, Kalinga
-- The provincial government aired its
its support to abolition of irrigation service fees (ISF) imposed by the
National Irrigation Administration (NIA) on beneficiaries of irrigation
systems.
Kalinga
is host to the Upper Chico River Irrigation System that supplies irrigation to
about 12,000 hectares of rice lands and benefiting thousands of farmers in
Tabuk Valley, part of Pinukpuk in Kalinga and neighboring Quezon in Isabela
province.
President
Rodrigo Duterte earlier announced he wanted the scrapping of ISF to lighten the
burden of farmers.
Engineer
Patrick Resurreccion of NIA said the Kalinga Irrigation Management Office has
no objection to the proposal of scrapping the ISF provided the national
government allocates funds for personnel services and maintenance and
other operating expenses
“An
average of P24 million is collected yearly from two cropping cycle in the UCRIS
service area,” Resurreccion said adding that P4 billion is needed to subsidize
NIA’s operation nationwide if the law will get enacted.
In
another development, the province through the SP also requested the President
to allocate funds for the tunnelling of the Alliog creek and siphoning its
water to irrigate some 1,800 hectares of idle lands in Rizal and the remaining
dry plains of Northern Tabuk.
Resurreccion
said a feasibility study was submitted in the past for endorsement by the
Regional Development Council and for the approval of the National Economic
Development Authority but was shelved when found financially not feasible
considering its estimate project cost of almost P500 million.
There
are five small impounding dams in Rizal but could only supply irrigation to a
maximum of 50 hectares and that water supply is dependent on the rain. Most of
the farmers are drawing water from mechanized shallow tube wells.
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