BAGUIO CITY-- The city
government is starting to convert the closed 60-year-old open dump facility to
an ecological park, transforming its location in Barangay Irisan to a forest
park, even as folks in the area said the stench is slowly abating and they are
now starting to breath whiffs of fresh air.
“Our initial estimate, we will be able to turn
this to an eco-park by 2021 but by the rate things are going, we hope that it
will already be done by the fourth quarter of 2020,” Mayor Benjamin Magalong
said in a press conference at the former Irisan dumpsite, where the Environment
Recycling System (ERS) or the city’s bio-composting facility is also located.
He said there
is already a layout of the plan of the site, where the trash slide happened
about a decade ago, converting it to a park.
Magalong said
some P15 million has been allotted for the project, which was approved during
the Executive-Legislative planning session earlier this week.
“Our
structural engineers are on it,” the mayor said, noting that government workers
are maintaining the site's stability to prevent further erosion.
Magalong said
the vision is to convert the area similar to the Mount Trashmore Park in
Virginia Beach, Virginia, which used to be a dump facility but converted to a
park.
“It will be
fixed, cleaned and maintained and will not in any way look like a dump area.
The foul smell that used to be irritating to the nostrils is also slowly being
addressed with the application of an inoculant,” Magalong said.
There will be
no sun-drying of compost and what will come out will be composted in sacks,
ready for transport to the buyers.
Rapport
Innovations, the consultant company that operates the ERS, is giving the city
P3 per kilo of compost produced.
“It will not
just save the city of the annual PHP18 million expense to operate the
nine-year-old facility but will also earn from the sale of compost fertilizer,”
Magalong said.
“We are now
producing compost. The ERS is operating well after its rehabilitation. The
compost we make is of good quality and is 90 percent efficient based on the
study conducted by the Fertilizer and Pesticide Authority," he said.
Meanwhile,
City General Services Office (GSO) chief Eugene Buyucan said the park will be
culturally-inspired having a “dap-ay” and will be planted with bougainvillea to
create a scenic view.
There will be
several flowering plants, “eugenia” tree, which has leaves that have different
colors, and bamboos as an added feature to prevent soil erosion, Buyucan said.
“Bamboos have
been proven (for) good soil retention, but we need to identify what species are
best grown in the area,” he said.
The dap-ay is
part of the region’s culture where old people meet to discuss and resolve
community or tribe issues.
Once
completed, Buyucan said the people in the area can enjoy a good view of the
sunset in La Union while enjoying a park lined with plants and flowers.
Buyucan said
at present, the city produces at least 12 tons of compost fertilizer daily from
the 50 tons of biodegradable waste collected mostly at the city market.
He said the
production can even go higher, especially with food waste coming in.
In June, the
Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) has ordered the closure
of the ERS facility due to violations. (PNA)
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