EDITORIAL
The plan of Malacanang officials to turn Philippine Information Agency
regional office across The Mansion in Baguio has stirred a hornet’s nest.
Local journalists are opposed to the government plan to turn the
Cordillera House or Lualhati Guest House, now being used by the PIA, into a
cottage for the executive secretary.
The PIA, which was given until August to move out is scouting for a new
site to set up office. With this, they will have to pay rent while the
executive secretary can stay there with his entourage every time he comes to
Baguio. This is a waste of taxpayers’ money.
The Office of the President’s Finance and Administration Office wrote
PIA Director General Harold Clavite in May asking PIA-CAR to turn over the
property to the OP’s Asset Management Office for renovation and conversion. The
house is actually sturdy and should be retained for its historical
significance.
Deputy Executive Secretary Rizalina Justol said the executive secretary,
who is tasked with assisting the president in running the executive branch, could
easily access the Baguio Mansion House from the Lualhati Guest House. “It will
also be used as venue for meetings, fora and other official functions,” Justol
added in her letter.
Justol claimed the OP-Property Inventory Team inspected the building in
March and found that it “is already weak and dilapidated and needs major
renovation or improvement and refurbishment.”
Now pundits are saying the team must have had weak eyes even and some
imaginative officials must be hoping to get some money from the so-called
“renovation.” Commentators are saying
they must have seen the scenic and cool place they would like it to become
their vacation house.
Media organizations in the city, including the National Union of
Journalists of the Philippines-Baguio Benguet, Baguio Correspondents and
Broadcasters Club and the National Correspondents Club of Baguio, oppose the
move.
NUJP-Baguio Benguet chapter chairman Kimberly Quitasol said PIA-CAR has
been using the building since 2005. Quitasol said the building, which, she said
is not dilapidated, had been a center for media training, seminars, meetings,
caucuses, conferences and assemblies, or get togethers.
“For all its historical significance and usefulness to local
journalism and to the public, we plead with the Office of the President to
retain the former Lualhati Cottage as the PIA’s hub.”
The BCBC, in a resolution, also urged Duterte to preserve the building
because it has “established a sense of community among local officials and the
media community, both local and national.”
The building, Jane Cadalig, president of BCBC said, “has sheltered for
free journalists from Manila and the lowlands, particularly the Malacañang
Press Corps during presidential coverages here or other events held in Baguio.”
The NCCB, headed by veteran journalist and former Baguio councilor
Nars Padilla, issued a manifesto asking the government to keep things as they
are.
The issue reeks of rotten intent by some people in Malacanang who got a
taste of power under the current administration to use government property and
public funds for their own personal and vested interests.
Let the building and surroundings remain as is and let the PIA regional
office retain management over the area.
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