By
Aileen P. Refuerzo
BAGUIO CITY – The
newly approved Environment Code of Baguio City has given the city government
“more teeth” to intensify its anti-squatting campaign.
City
building and architecture office head Nazita Banez said the code contains
specific provisions that mandate concerned offices to demolish ongoing
constructions on road rights-of-way, parks, forest and water reservations and
other protected areas.
It also
tasked the city environment and parks management office “to primarily lead the
collective action of agencies including the CBAO, Dept. of Environmental and
Natural Resources, Dept. of Public Works and Highways, city engineering office,
barangays and the city legal office to file cases against the illegal settlers
and to impose the penal provision of fine or imprisonment.”
In her
report before city officials and employees led by Mayor Mauricio Domogan and
Vice Mayor Edison Bilog last Monday, Banez said that for this semester,
investigation section of the CBAO received 290 complaints on squatting
activities.
As per
CBAO’s procedure, the complaints are subjected to investigations with the
results forwarded to the anti-illegal squatting committee for deliberation.
“Demolitions
are scheduled on a first-in-first-out basis with the occupants given 30 days to
voluntarily demolish and vacate the area or the city demolition team will
destroy the structure and even confiscate the materials to be used for
government projects,” Banez said.
She said
that while the city has a set of procedure in tackling existing illegal
structures on private lots, the city through the CEPMO should also focus on
establishing a system on the prevention of the squatting activities in critical
areas and the filing of charges against those responsible using the provisions
of the environment code.
Banez said
the code’s provisions focusing on critical or high-risk areas and the
protection and management of special lands should also be strictly implemented
in line with the city’s disaster risk management thrust.
“During
calamities and rainy or typhoon season, it is the illegal settlers that are
affected the most since their structures are built on critical slopes without
any compliance to the National Building Code, National Structural Code of the
Philippines and these structures are not permitted,” Banez said.
The code
specifies that the city will not allow construction on critical slopes without
conducting soil tests and introducing appropriate engineering
interventions.
Approved
last year, the code serves as a blueprint to maintain the city as an
eco-cultural tourist destination with emphasis on the protection and management
of lands particularly the protected areas covering national parks, natural
monuments, parks, protected landscapes, resource reserves, strict nature
reserves and wildlife sanctuaries.
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