City wants buyers out from GSIS lot over pine stand
>> Tuesday, January 1, 2019
BENCHWARMER
Ramon Dacawi
No
business enterprise would have its name smeared for having destroyed Baguio’s
pine forest beside the Baguio Convention Center for the sake of profit.
This emerging view may
yet save the man-made pine stand amidst renewed apprehension of city
residents and visitors over the refusal of the Government Service
Insurance System (GSIS) to sell the lot to the city so that it be preserved for
posterity.
Instead of accepting the
city’s offer, GSIS upped the purchase price, prompting mayor Mauricio Domogan
to seek intervention of President Rodrigo Duterte to save the pine-stand as
part of Baguio’s legacy.
“Instead of maintaining
its previous offer of Php 433,517,400, the GSIS increased it to Php 682,201,800
per its latest letter dated 23 April 2018 which or office received today, and
is hereby attached as Annex “C”,” the mayor wrote the President.
“The city sent its reply
containing its latest offer in the amount of P433,517,400 which is the exact
amount that GSIS offered in its letter, Annex “A” hereof. The latest offer of
GSIS increasing its previous offer from P433,517,400 to P682,201,800 is
respectfully submitted as too high,” the mayor told the President.
City officials and
residents were alarmed over the increasing price of the pine forest despite its
being acquired for free by GSIS through the signature of then President Marcos.
Marcos,
in an order, sliced off the present site of the Baguio Convention Center, the
pine forest and adjoining areas with an approximate size of 33,606 square
meters and transferred it in the name of GSIS.
The order mandated GSIS
to build the Convention Center as site of the World Chess Championship series
between Anatoly Karpov and Viktor Korchnoi.
Baguio residents of all
ages took turns planting and caring for the pine trees that turned the
once-barren area into a mini-forest that showcases Baguio’s past when it was
called the country’s “City of Pines”.
Protests over the
cutting down of the pine trees to give way to a commercial building may yet
deter business enterprises from bidding for the pine stand
“The pine trees growing
in the area have become the best deterrent to investors who now have to think
twice before bidding for the lot, knowing they would meet stiff
opposition the moment they start clearing the area of trees so they can build
their commercial buildings,” a Baguio resident observed.
“If this happens, there
would be an uproar among foresters, government officials and employees,
students and laborers took turns planting and caring for pine over the years
until the otherwise barren area became the patch that it is today – a
forest where we can still smell the scent of pine.”
In a letter to the mayor
last May 25, GSIS president and general manager Jesus Clint Aranas said the
price had been upped to Php 8682,201, to which the city agreed.
“We reiterate our
motivation to purchase the said property, that is to preserve and maintain the
area as a green space,” the mayor wrote Aranas. “This is part of the City’s
environment policy to recover public spaces and green areas for the
benefit of our citizenry and also to contribute to sustaining our ecosystem and
develop buffer areas for emerging environmental impacts in our urban setting’”
the mayor noted.
The rapid urbanization
of Baguio has led some citizens to suggest that the city, also known as the
country’s “Summer Capital”, be considered as another “Boracay” where
environmental projects and actions can be set into motion to slow down its
deterioration.
Upon learning the threat
on the pine forest has been resurrected, school children and teachers of
the Baguio Pines Family Learning Center last Tuesday began hatching moves
supporting the city’s bid for the two adjoining lots.
“Our kids plan to write
President Duterte asking him to look into the possibility of his rescinding the
order of then President Marcos assigning the two lost to GSIS,” school
principal Leonila Dumawa Bayla said.
Former kids of the
school began the campaign to save the trees years back, writing then
President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo to save the green patch. The kids enlarged
their letters in tarpaulin which they hanged on the threatened trees.
Responding, then
Presidnt Arroyo promised the trees would be spared from private development
plans. Eventually, mall chain Shoemart cancelled its plan to build a
four-building condotel on the pinestand called “Baguio A Residences.
As they did in the past,
Baguio residents are again asking expatriates and people who care for Baguio to
write letters appealing to GSIS to let the city buy the choice lot it obtained
for free.. – Ramon Dacawi.
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