Saving a city’s lure
>> Saturday, December 24, 2016
BENCHWARMER
Ramon
S. Dacawi
BAGUIO CITY -- About this time some eight years
back, Shoemart confirmed before the city council it was bent on building a
condominium-cum-commercial complex on that patch of pine beside the Baguio
Convention Center .
Since then, SM’s plan to construct a multi-story,
four-building structure has been shelved, thanks to the city’s official and
resident opposition .
The prevailing sentiment then was also aired
through children’s letters for then President Arroyo to have
the Government Service Insurance System, owner of the property by virtue of an
order by then President Marcos, cancel its deal for that commercial
venture with SM. Set in tarpaulin for all to see, the letters, strung on the
trees by the kids themselves, were stolen a day after they were
installed within the patch.
The news then was that the condotel would be called
“Baguio Air Residences”, an irony of sorts had the project proceeded at the
expense of the thousand or so pine trees balled and planted on the tiny patch
of green that serves as a buffer to the continuing urban sprawl.
The news then was that SM would cut only 313 of the
over 900 green and brown sentinels for Baguio’s environment, that SM would
transfer some and spare the rest, in consultation with its consultancy agency
based in Manila.
Having grown up with pine trees, I know the Benguet
variety is one of the most sensitive species. It can be balled when it’s
sapling or pole-size, but not when it’s over 30 years old, like those at the
man-made patch, which were balled and planted as a backdrop to the 1978 World
Chess Championship series at the Baguio Convention Center that then President
Marcos ordered GSIS to build for such purpose.
Take the case of Camp John Hay. When
earth-moving was done to level sites for residential houses of the
rich, the trunk base of some mature pines were covered by soil. The
soil cover, measuring only a foot or two, choked the mature pine, killing them
softly, slowly and silently. That’s how sensitive the Benguet pine is, its
fading scent we now pine for – resident and visitor alike. .
We can’t do anything about Camp John Hay, it being
national government property. About the mini-patch of green beside the
Convention Center, GSIS yielded to Mayor Mauricio Domogan’s request that
it be acquired by the city on a land-swap agreement. That deal came on the heels
of the city buying the Convention Center itself, a structure the GSIS built at
its own expense.
Although now acquired through purchase by the city,
the patch of pine may yet be subject to changes in city policy in the future.
Chances are that Shoemart’s vision and mission for a condotel development of
the area would be revived in future city administrations, not necessarily by
Shoemart but by other giant enterprises. This will be likely, for its lure for
business enterprise grows stronger as demand for Baguio’s land increases.
Perhaps it would be sound governance policy to
eventually annotate on the city’s title the condition that the said patch of
green shall forever remain as such and never ever to be subjected to
infrastructure and human development other than what it now stands for – as the
symbol of the city of pines that it was.
Now that we’re at it, my citizen’s platform is for
the city to exercise its power of eminent domain over the remaining forested
private lands of Baguio. This is most urgent an action, as the city now
struggles to undo a national government agency’s generosity in awarding as
private property some of Baguio’s long-established pine forests and parks.
The city, if I may, can and should adopt
as policy the expropriation and preservation of private forest lands as
pine stands, if only to remind us of the beauty that was Baguio. This radical
approach to preservation is most urgent before all of what remains of these are
bought and developed by giant subdivision developers and investors, they who
are cashing in on the remaining lure of Baguio yet, ironically blame us for its
destruction.
Now that we’re at it, the city can also expropriate
other privately owned pine stands, open spaces and lots and save them from the
incessant inroad of subdivisions and commercial structures.
It may be too late in the day, but it would have
been sound to expropriate that corner of Session Road and Lower Mabini St. and
develop it into an open space, a mini-park where senior citizens like me can
read the weeklies while basking in the Sunday morning sun.
An open space can serve as a refreshing counterpoint
to the concrete jungle that is Session Rd.
It would be also in keeping with the vision of the
city’s founding fathers to recover and restore the sidewalks which were
installed in keeping with the vanishing fact that it’s pleasant to walk in
Baguio. Baguio, originally, was made for walking. This is a luxury of sorts
that you can hardly have in tropical Philippines. (e-mail:mondaxbench@yahoo.com for comments.)
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