Following
complaints from La Trinidad folks
BAGUIO CITY --
Mayor Mauricio G. Domogan told the hauler of the city’s residual waste from its
transfer station in Lamtang, Puguis, La Trinidad to relocate it to his property
to avoid complaints from residents on nuisance that it poses to them.
This after
La Trinidad Mayor Romeo Salda ordered the hauler to transfer the station due to
complaints of residents like those on sanitation and foul order emanating from
the site which is near a school.
The city
chief executive said the local government should not have been included in the
case filed by residents against MA Camilo Freight Services because it is the
primary obligation of the hauler to provide his own transfer station prior to
the hauling of the residual waste to the Capas landfill.
“We were
informed that Camilo has a 4,500-square meter property in the same barangay
which was set for inspection by the technical personnel of the Department of
Environment and Natural Resources if it passes the guidelines for a waste
transfer station so that he can relocate the questioned transfer station to
said place and avoid complaints from residents,” Domogan said.
One of the
terms of reference when the local government bid out the hauling of the city’s
residual waste to the Capas landfill was that the hauler must have his own
transfer station compliant with the stringent rules of the DENR.
Despite the
prayer for the issuance of the required temporary restraining order to stop the
utilization of the Lamtang waste transfer station by the hauler, a local court
failed to issue the prayed restraining order and instead set the hearing on the
case on June 27.
Domogan
said the hauler could bargain with the La Trinidad municipal government to give
him time to relocate the questioned Lamtang waste transfer station to an area
that has passed the requirements of the agency.
The city’s
garbage trucks bring the collected waste from the barangays to the waste
transfer station where the same shall be sorted and the residual waste is the
one hauled to the Capas landfill.
Domogan
admitted the closure of the waste transfer station without the identification
of a new transfer site will be detrimental to the city’s garbage disposal,
thus, the need for the hauler to make the appropriate action with concerned
government agencies and the La Trinidad municipal government to find solutions
to the problem.
He said the
Lamtang waste transfer station passed standards of the DENR that is why he is
wondering why residents continue to protest the existence of activities within
the station that create nuisance in their neighborhood.
Aside from
the 4,500-square meter property, the mayor urged the management of Camilo
Freight Services to continue looking for other areas which could be used for
the purpose so that he will have other alternatives in the future once his
property will not be able to pass the standards of the DENR during the
inspection that will be scheduled to ascertain its viability as a potential
waste transfer station.
Camilo
qualified as the city’s hauler of residual waste generated by the households
primarily because he was the one that was able to present a waste transfer
station approved by the DENR.
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