Probe on operation of Camp 7 batching plant ordered
>> Saturday, July 29, 2017
By
Dexter A. See
BAGUIO CITY – Mayor
Mauricio G. Domogan ordered the City Health Services Office, City Environment
and Parks Management Office and the City Buildings and Architecture Office to
reconvene into a task force to conduct an investigation on the alleged
unhealthy operations of the controversial Camp 7 batching plant in the light of
the implementation of the city’s Environment code among other violations.
Domogan
said it is high time for the controversial cement batching plant to be closed
because its operations pose a serious threat to the health of the people living
around it aside from the nuisance that it causes while operating which are all
in violation of the pertinent provisions of Ordinance No. 18, series of 2016 or
the city’s Environment code.
“We
have to take drastic measures to close the operation of the controversial
batching plant which has been the subject of numerous verbal complaints from
affected residents and motorists over the past several years. We already gave
the operator the leeway to voluntarily move out of the residential area but it
seems our repeated appeals have fell on deaf ears because of the greed for
greater income,” Domogan said.
He also
took note of the previous commitment of William Tan, the owner of the controversial
cement batching plant, for him to voluntarily move out of the area and transfer
to a still undisclosed place in Tam-awan but a good number of years have passed
and such promise remained an unfulfilled promise by the wealthy businessman.
According
to him, the task force should jointly conduct the required inspection the
soonest and for the members to submit their consolidated findings and
recommendations for the possible closure of the batching plant so that he will
implement whatever drastic moves that will be undertaken to once and for all
put an end to the sufferings of the residents leaving around the batching
plant.
Domogan
said the proprietor of the batching plant is using a questionable decision of
the Regional Trial Court that declared the city’s anti-batching plant ordinance
which was appealed by the city legal office to the Court of Appeals to cover
his continued stay in Camp 7 amidst opposition from affected residents who want
the said facility to be out of their area because of nuisance and pollution it
has caused them through the years.
In 2007,
the city adopted Ordinance No. 43, series of 2007 that prohibits the operation
of cement batching plants around the city because of the nuisance that it poses
to the public.
Domogan
said it is still best for the operator to comply with his long standing
commitment to relocate to a place outside the city because of the numerous
problems that it poses to the health and the environment of the city as a
whole.
The task
force will be trying to set the guidelines for the scheduled inspection of the
questioned batching plant so that its actions will be consolidated for the
further needed action of the local chief executive.
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